Showing posts with label Hans Zimmer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hans Zimmer. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Inception


Inception
(Original Motion Picture Score)

Music Composed by
Hans Zimmer

As the final release of 2025, Renovatio Records closes the year with Inception, a score that has remained deeply embedded in contemporary film culture. When Christopher Nolan’s science-fiction thriller premiered in 2010, it arrived not only as a major studio release but as a labyrinthine film that tested the limits of mainstream storytelling, asking audiences to engage with layered dream logic, elastic perceptions of time, and a protagonist defined as much by emotional fracture as by narrative function. Central to that experience was Hans Zimmer’s score for Inception, a work whose sound would resonate far beyond the film itself.

Fifteen years later, while Zimmer’s music remains inseparable from the film’s identity, its immense low-end sonorities and relentless momentum have become a familiar presence in modern blockbuster scoring. This 15th anniversary edition from Renovatio Records presents the score in a newly revised and expanded form, restoring previously unreleased material and reorganizing the music into a largely chronological narrative. In doing so, it offers a clearer view of the score’s internal logic, emotional trajectory, and architectural design than ever before.

Inception stands as one of the most ambitious and influential mainstream science-fiction films of the 21st century. Blending elements of the heist genre with speculative metaphysics, the film explores the architecture of dreams as both a narrative device and a thematic obsession. At its core lies a deceptively simple premise: a team of specialists infiltrates the subconscious to extract or, in this case, implant an idea. Yet from this foundation, Nolan constructs a multi-layered narrative in which time dilates, realities overlap, and emotional truth becomes increasingly elusive.

Leonardo DiCaprio leads the film as Dom Cobb, a skilled extractor haunted by guilt and unresolved loss, whose inner conflict becomes the story’s emotional center. He is supported by a broad ensemble cast that gives the film both scale and texture: Joseph Gordon-Levitt as the disciplined Arthur; Elliot Page (credited as Ellen Page) as Ariadne, the architect and audience proxy; Tom Hardy as the improvisational Eames; Ken Watanabe as the enigmatic Saito; Cillian Murphy as the target of the inception; and Marion Cotillard as Mal, Cobb’s wife and the most volatile manifestation of his subconscious. Together, the cast navigates material that balances exposition-heavy mechanics with moments of emotional intimacy, not always seamlessly, but with clear ambition.

While Inception was widely praised for its originality, technical control, and conceptual reach, it also attracted criticism. Some responses pointed to Nolan’s reliance on dense, explanatory dialogue, often delivered with an almost procedural rigidity. Others noted moments of emotional stiffness or uneven performances, particularly where the narrative’s mechanics take precedence over character nuance. Even so, such criticisms frequently acknowledged that these tensions stemmed from the film’s refusal to dilute its complexity for accessibility.

Behind the camera, Nolan once again assembled a familiar creative team whose contributions proved integral to the film’s coherence. Cinematographer Wally Pfister’s large-format imagery lends clarity and physicality to the shifting dreamscapes, while editor Lee Smith orchestrates the film’s intricate cross-cutting across multiple temporal layers. Production designer Guy Hendrix Dyas and the visual effects teams at Double Negative created environments that feel both abstract and tangible, grounding conceptual ideas in physical space. Together, these elements form a rigorously controlled cinematic machine, in which structure, rhythm, and precision are paramount.

Upon release, Inception was both a commercial success and a frequent subject of debate. The film earned eight Academy Award nominations, winning four, and received widespread recognition for its technical achievements. Over time, its influence has only become more apparent, particularly in its integration of music and sound design into narrative structure, and in its willingness to foreground complexity within a blockbuster framework.

For Inception, Nolan once again collaborated with Hans Zimmer, continuing a partnership that began with Batman Begins and The Dark Knight. By 2010, the two had developed a shared approach rooted in rhythm, texture, and conceptual cohesion rather than traditional thematic scoring. Rather than treating the film as a conventional science-fiction or heist project, Zimmer focused on its core ideas: time dilation, memory, and subjective experience. Nolan famously provided Zimmer with an emotional brief without revealing the full plot, asking for music centered on longing and loss. From this starting point, Zimmer constructed a score that operates across multiple temporal and emotional planes, mirroring the film’s layered dream structure.

One of the score’s most distinctive conceptual foundations is its relationship to Edith Piaf’s song “Non, je ne regrette rien,” used in the film as a signal to synchronize dream layers and trigger the “kick” that wakes the dreams. Zimmer digitally manipulated the recording, stretching it across time to reflect the film’s temporal mechanics. He isolated the song’s brassy rhythmic accents and expanded them into the monumental low-frequency brass hits that became the score’s defining sonic gesture: the now-iconic “horn of doom” or “BRAM.” Introduced in the opening cue, “Half Remembered Dream,” this sound functions less as a motif than as a structural force, establishing weight, pressure, and inevitability.

Throughout the score, Zimmer relies on layered brass, low strings, and percussion to generate momentum that rarely resolves. Instead of developing themes through melodic variation, the music evolves through accumulation: rhythms slow down, harmonies thicken, and textures expand as the narrative descends deeper into the dream. This approach is especially evident in action cues such as “Dream Is Collapsing,” “Mombasa Chase,” “Destabilization,” and “The Complex,” where the music drives the action with relentless propulsion while remaining emotionally opaque.

Threaded through this dense sonic fabric is the electric guitar work of The Smiths’ former guitarist, Johnny Marr. Often processed and rhythmically integrated into the texture, the guitar seldom emerges as a solo voice, instead reinforcing motion and tension while subtly distinguishing Inception from more traditional action scores.

Despite its emphasis on texture and momentum, Inception is anchored by several clearly defined thematic ideas. The most recognizable is the “time” theme, introduced at the beginning of the album and gradually developed throughout the score. Built on a simple repeating harmonic progression, it reflects Cobb’s unresolved grief and longing for reunion with his children. Its eventual full release in “Welcome Home, Mr. Cobb” at the end of the film, feels profoundly earned, precisely because the score has withheld emotional resolution for so long.

A second, more intimate theme is associated with Cobb and Mal, representing memory, guilt, and destructive love. Explored in cues such as “Dreams or Memories?”, “Mal and Cobb,” “Inception,” and “Old Souls,” this material unfolds through suspended harmonies and softened textures, often feeling disconnected from forward motion. Together with the “time” theme, these two ideas form the emotional core of the score, driving its most personal moments.

Additional motivic material supports the ensemble narrative. A motif for the heist team is introduced in the kinetic “Mombasa Chase”, built from rhythmic propulsion. This idea returns during “The Plan”, where it takes on a more controlled, deliberate character as the team consolidates and the mechanics of the inception are laid out. Closely related is a guitar-driven motif (essentially a repeating riff) heard prominently in “Meeting Ariadne” and woven throughout “The Plan”. This material is all about momentum and cohesion, reflecting both the assembling of the team and the fragile balance required to execute the mission.

Zimmer also employs a recurring harmonic progression that appears across several key cues, including “Dream Is Collapsing”, “Physics and Subconscious”, “The Complex”, and “Inception”. This progression derives from Piaf’s song and evokes the vast, awe-inspiring possibilities of shared dreaming while simultaneously suggesting danger and instability.

Smaller ideas further enrich the score’s architecture. The most noticeable of these is a low-string figure associated with Saito, introduced in “Half Remembered Dream” and revisited at the close of “Old Souls,” where it intersects with the Cobb–Mal material to provide a musically driven sense of closure.

Taken together, these elements reveal Inception as more than a collection of conventional musical moments. Rhythm, harmony, texture, and motif operate across multiple layers, shaping the audience’s perception of time, memory, and emotional consequence with remarkable precision.

For all its cultural impact, Inception has had a surprisingly limited history on album. The original 2010 WaterTower Music release offered a carefully assembled listening experience that favored flow and immediacy over narrative chronology. While effective on its own terms, that presentation condensed and reordered material into suites, leaving portions of the score’s internal development unexplored.

This new Renovatio Records edition addresses that gap with a revised and expanded presentation. By restoring previously unreleased cues and arranging the music largely in chronological order, it allows Zimmer’s musical ideas to unfold with greater clarity and dramatic coherence. The result is a presentation that showcases the score’s carefully engineered musical construction, revealing connections between motifs, harmonic progressions, and rhythmic strategies that are less apparent in the earlier release. As both a 5th anniversary release and the label’s final title of 2025, this edition offers an ideal opportunity to revisit one of Hans Zimmer’s most influential scores. Press play, follow the layers, and allow the architecture of the dream to unfold once more.



Track listing:

1. Half Remembered Dream (1:47)
2. Dream is Collapsing (2:21)
3. Meeting Ariadne (3:45)
4. Physics and Subconscious (4:54)
5. Mombasa Chase (4:43)
6. Dreams or Memories? (3:58)
7. Mal and Cobb (6:33)
8. The Plan (8:36)
9. Destabilization (2:45)
10. The Complex (7:04)
11. Limbo (4:54)
12. Inception (8:39)
13. Old Souls (3:11)
14. Welcome Home, Mr. Cobb (3:22)

Total Running Time: 66:32







Size: 329.5 MB
Files type: FLAC Audio File [.flac]
Channels: 2 (stereo)
Sample Rate: 44.1 KHz
Sample Size: 16 bit
Bit Rate: 1,411 kbps




Cover Artwork:






Credits:

Music Composed by Hans Zimmer

Music Produced by Hans Zimmer, Lorne Balfe, Christopher Nolan and Alex Gibson
Executive Producer for Renovatio Records: John M. Angier
Executive in Charge of Music for Warner Bros. Pictures: Paul Broucek and Darren Higman

Additional Music: Lorne Balfe
Guitar: Johnny Marr
Ambient Music Design: Mel Wesson
Synth Programming: Hans Zimmer and Howard Scarr
Digital Instrument Design: Mark Wherry
Supervising Orchestrator: Bruce L. Fowler
Orchestrators: Elizabeth Finch, Walter Fowler, Rick Giovinazzo, Kevin Kaska, Suzette Moriarty, Ed Neumeister, Carl Rydlund
Music Score Consultant: Gavin Greenaway
Orchestra Conducted by: Matt Dunkley

Supervising Music Editor: Alex Gibson
Music Editor: Ryan Rubin
Assistant Music Editors: Peter Oso Snell, Mike Higham
Sequencer Programming: Nick Delaplane, Andrew Kawczynski, Jacob Shea
Head Technical Score Engineer: Thomas Broderick
Technical Score Engineer: Chuck Choi

Orchestra Contractor: Isobel Griffiths
Music Production Services: Steven Kofsky
Score Coordinator: Andrew Zack
Music Preparation: Booker White and Jill Streeter
Score Recorded by Geoff Foster
Assistant Engineer: Chris Barrett
Score Mixed by Alan Meyerson, assisted by Daniel Kresco
Score Recorded at Air Lyndhurst, London, UK
Score Mixed at Remote Control Productions
Sample Development: Claudius Bruese, Sam Estes and Michael Hobe
Studio Managers for Remote Control Productions: Czarina Russel and Shalini Singh
Mastered by Pat Sullivan at Bernie Grundman Mastering, Hollywood, CA
Film Music Clearance: Bobby Thornburg
Music Business Affairs: Lisa Margolis, Jamie Roberts, Emio Zizza
Album Sequencing: John M. Angier
Art Direction: Mira B. Ellis

Music published by Warner Olive Music (ASCAP)

Score contains interpolations of "Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien"
Performed by Edith Piaf
Written by Charles Dumont and Michel Vaucaire
Published by Shapiro, Bernstein & Co. Inc. - Barclay Music Division o/b/o S.E.M.I./peermusic for the USA and Canada
Used courtesy of EMI Music France, under license from EMI Music Marketing.

Special Thanks: Christopher Nolan, Emma Thomas, Alan Horn, Jeff Robinov, Paul Broucek, Lee Smith, Richard Kind, Gary Rizzo, Lora Hirschberg, Bonnie Abaunza, Bob Badami, Eva and David Balfe, Tiffany Bordenave, Marc Brickman, Jo Buckley, Ben Burfield, Alison Burton and the staff at Air Studios, Ronni Chasen, Melissa Crow, Suzanne Fritz, Jordan Goldberg, Max Golfar, Juli Goodwin, Michael Gorfaine, Peter Gorges, Isobel Griffiths, Tina Guo, David Hall, Nick Haussling, Urs Heckmann, Jason Hillhouse, Aleksey Igudesman, Alana Kass, Steven Kofsky, Sue Kroll, Emy Macek, Heather MacFarlane, Christina Mansky, Lisa Margolis, Satoshi Noguchi, Diarmuid Quinn, Satnam Ramgotra, Xavier Ramos, Rachel Reyes, Jaime Roberts, Lee Rossignol, Andrew Rossiter, Jeff Sanderson, Sam Schwartz, Charlie Steinberg, Diego Stocco, Chris Strong, Jonna Terrasi, Derek Thorn, Bobby Thornburg, Ryan Uchida, Elizabeth Warren and Emio Zizza. Suzanne Zimmer and the Mini-Z's Zoë Zimmer.




Cue Assembly:

Track Title

Slate Number and Cue Title

1. Half Remembered Dream

1m00 Logos

1m01 Cobb Meets Saito (Edited)

2. Dream is Collapsing

F-Riff Suite (Edited)

3. Meeting Ariadne

2m08 Miles Introduces Ariadne (Edited)

Kick It Suite (Edited)

4. Physics and Subconscious

2m08 Miles Introduces Ariadne (Edited)

2m10 Physics & Subconscious (Edited)

5. Mombassa Chase

2m13 Mombassa Chase (Edited)

Mombassa Suite (Edited)

2m13 Mombassa Chase (Edited)

6. Dreams or Memories

2m11 Totem

3m18 Dreams Or Memories (Edited)

7. Mal and Cobb

4m25 Mal & Cobb (Edited)

8. The Plan

4m19 En Route (Edited)

3m16 Strategy (Edited)

9. Destabilization

5m28 Destabilization

10. The Complex

6m29 Planning The Diversion (Edited)

6m30-33 To The Complex (Edited)

1m02 Extraction (Edited)

6m30-33 To The Complex (Edited)

6m35-36 It's A Trap (Edited)

11. Limbo

6m37 Walking Through Limbo

7m38 An Idea Is Like A Virus (Edited)

12. Inception

7m39-43 Truth Once Known (Edited)

7m44 Fischer & Son (Edited)

7m39-43 Truth Once Known (Edited)

13. Old Souls

7m46 Honor Our Agreement (Edited)

4m23 Saito's Fate (Edited)

14. Welcome Home, Mr. Cobb

7m47 Welcome Home Mr. Cobb (Edited)

Time Suite (Edited)



Motion picture title, artwork and photography © 2010 Warner Bros. Entertainment. and Legendary Pictures. This compilation and cover artwork © 2025 Renovatio Records. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applicable laws. For promotional use only.

Renovatio Records [0-01702-19112]


Monday, December 30, 2024

Interstellar

 

Interstellar
(Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Music by
Hans Zimmer

To close 2024 on a high note, Renovatio Records is proud to present our final release of the year: the iconic Academy Award-nominated score from Interstellar by Hans Zimmer, celebrating its 10th anniversary. Directed by visionary filmmaker Christopher Nolan, Interstellar remains a hallmark of modern cinema, masterfully intertwining a gripping narrative about humanity’s survival with profound scientific concepts, including wormholes, relativity, and black holes—all while anchoring its story in the deeply emotional bond between a father and his daughter.

Featuring a stellar cast that includes Matthew McConaughey, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain, John Lithgow, Mackenzie Foy, Timothée Chalamet, Casey Affleck, Wes Bentley, and Michael Caine, the film delivers performances that bring depth and authenticity to this ambitious tale. The film’s breathtaking cinematography by Hoyte van Hoytema captures the grandeur of space like never before, and the screenplay—crafted by Jonathan and Christopher Nolan—brilliantly simplifies complex physics for general audiences without losing its intellectual edge. With critical acclaim and a box-office success exceeding $677 million worldwide, Interstellar remains a timeless cinematic achievement that continues to captivate audiences to this day.

For the musical score, Nolan approached his frequent collaborator, Hans Zimmer, with a deeply personal brief: to create a score that prioritized human emotions over the grandiose spectacle depicted on screen. Zimmer’s response was a score that defies conventions, blending minimalistic motifs with innovative instrumentation to craft a soundscape as vast and mysterious as the cosmos. Drawing inspiration from the avant-garde textures of György Ligeti and the minimalist patterns of Philip Glass, Zimmer synthesizes these influences into something unmistakably his own.

The centerpiece of the score is the pipe organ, recorded at London’s Temple Church and performed by Roger Sayer, which imbues the music with a quasi-religious quality, amplifying the story’s philosophical exploration of humanity’s place in the cosmos. The instrument’s resonance ties the vastness of the universe to the deeply personal stakes of the narrative, reflecting how the survival of a species can hinge on a single, profoundly human connection. 

Zimmer also employs slow tempos and percussive elements to evoke the relentless passage of time, a central theme to the narrative. Nowhere is this more evident than in “Those Aren’t Mountains,” where ticking rhythms underscore the characters’ desperate race against time on a planet where every second carries grave consequences.

The main theme, introduced in the opening cue “Dreaming of the Crash” and further explored in the emotionally charged “Stay,” exemplifies Zimmer’s hallmark style: a deceptively simple motif that develops into a sweeping, grand composition. The theme makes standout appearances throughout the score, most notably as a distant piano rendition at the end of “Entering Endurance” and a climactic orchestral rendition in “Detach”, which demonstrates Zimmer’s ability to evoke grand, cosmic emotions while maintaining an intimate core, capturing the emotional turmoil of sacrifice and separation with its powerful crescendos and intricate layering of sound, blending organ, strings, and subtle electronic textures.

For the central family dynamic, Zimmer crafts a tender, recurring phrase, first heard in “Drone Chase” with bold pipe organ performances, later revisited with poignant intimacy in “Messages from Home,” underscoring one of the film’s most iconic moments, and reaching emotionally-charged peaks during the climactic cues “Quantifiable Connection” and “Where We’re Going”. These cues showcase the duality of cosmic scale and personal stakes that defines the score, reinforcing Interstellar’s themes of love as a transcendent force capable of bridging time and space.

Secondary motifs add further depth to the score. The ‘science’ motif, introduced in the latter half of “Drone Chase,” represents humanity’s groundbreaking advancements driving the crew forward. This theme is beautifully developed in cues like “Dust Message” and “Who’s They?”. Additionally, a mysterious string motif symbolizes isolation, appearing in “Dust Message” and evolving into tranquil sounds in “I’m Going Home.” This theme perfectly reflects Earth as a soon-to-be inhospitable place, and later sonically links the idea with the barren ice planet that is visited by the crew at the end of the film.

Action music emerges prominently in the second half of the score, particularly in the cues “Dr. Mann” and “No Time for Caution”, featuring nervous string rattles, pulsing organ, and crashing piano, while revisiting earlier motifs to maintain narrative cohesion.

While divisive among critics—some praise its innovation while others critique its slow pacing and perceived recycling of Zimmer’s earlier ideas—the Interstellar score remains one of the composer’s most defining works of the past decade, as well as one of his most profound works, perfectly mirroring the emotional core of Christopher Nolan’s narrative.

Over the years, Zimmer’s Interstellar score has seen multiple releases. The initial 2014 album by WaterTower Music and Sony Classical provided most of the score’s highlights but was out of chronological order and omitted significant cues. A deluxe edition followed, featuring eight additional tracks but retaining the non-linear presentation. An expanded release further improved the offering, but fans still yearned for a comprehensive and narratively cohesive edition. Paramount’s Academy Awards consideration edition presented much of Zimmer’s work in chronological order, though it still excluded several alternate and key cues.

Renovatio Records is now proud to offer a definitive 2-CD release that addresses these shortcomings. This new edition presents the highlights of the score in chronological order, allowing listeners to experience its thematic and narrative progression as intended, providing a holistic and immersive journey through Zimmer’s musical cosmos.

As we close 2024, Interstellar marks a perfect conclusion to our year, celebrating a decade of one of cinema’s most groundbreaking collaborations between music and storytelling.


Track listing:

Disc 1:
1. Dreaming of the Crash (3:54)
2. Drone Chase (3:57)
3. Dust Message (5:40)
4. Who's They? (3:48)
5. Stay (6:01)
6. Entering Endurance (4:37)
7. Through the Wormhole (4:01)
8. Those Aren't Mountains (3:40)
9. Messages from Home (6:56)
10. No Need to Come Back (3:53)

Disc 2:
1. I'm Going Home (5:45)
2. Dr. Mann (6:34)
3. No Time for Caution (9:04)
4. Detach (6:38)
5. Quantifiable Connection (8:04)
6. Where We're Going (7:41)

Disc 1 Running Time: 46:27
Disc 2 Running Time: 43:46
Total Running Time: 90:13





Size: 431.8 MB
Files type: FLAC Audio File [.flac]
Channels: 2 (stereo)
Sample Rate: 44.1 KHz
Sample Size: 16 bit
Bit Rate: 1,411 kbps


Cover Artwork:







Credits:

Music Composed by Hans Zimmer

Score Produced by Christopher Nolan, Hans Zimmer, Alex Gibson
Executive in Charge of Music for Warner Bros. Pictures: Paul Broucek
Executive in Charge of Music for Paramount Pictures: Randy Spendlove
Music Business Affairs Executive: Lisa Margolis

Supervising Music Editor: Alex Gibson
Music Editor: Ryan Rubin
Music Consultant: Czarina Russell
Sequence Programming: Andrew Kawczynski, Steve Mazzaro

Music Production Services: Steven Kofsky
Technical Score Engineers: Chuck Choi, Stephanie McNally
Technical Assistants: Jacqueline Friedberg, Leland Cox

Digital Instrument Design: Mark Wherry
Supervising Orchestrator: Bruce L. Fowler
Orchestrators: Walt Fowler, Suzette Moriarty, Kevin Kaska, Carl Rydlund, Elizabeth Finch, Andrew Kinney
Orchestra Conducted by: Gavin Greenaway, Richard Harvey
Ambient Music Design: Mario Reinsch

Score Recorded at: Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios and Temple Church, London
Score Recorded by Geoff Foster, Alan Meyerson
Score Mixed by Alan Meyerson
Score Mix Assistant: John Witt Chapman
Additional Engineering: Christian Wenger, Seth Waldmann, Daniel Kresco
Assistant to Hans Zimmer: Cynthia Park
Studio Manager for Remote Control Productions: Shalini Singh
Contractor: Isobel Griffiths

Choir: London Voices
Soloists:
The Organ at Temple Church: Roger Sayer
Piano and Synth Programming: Hans Zimmer
Violin: Ann Marie Simpson
Steel Guitar: Chas Smith
Tuned Percussion: Frank Ricotti
Harp: Skaila Kanga

Sampling Team: Ben Robinson, Taurees Habib, Raul Vega
Music Preparation: Booker T. White
Music Librarian: Jill Streater
Score Mixed at: Remote Control Production, Santa Monica, CA

Published by Warner-Olive Music, LLC and Paramount Allegra Music (ASCAP)



Cue Assembly:

Track Title
Cue Title
1. Dreaming of the Crash
1m1 Dreaming of the Crash
2. Drone Chase
1m2 Chasing Drone
1m3 Flying Drone
3. Dust Message
2m6 Decoding the Message
4. Who’s They?
2m7 Who’s They? (Edited)
5. Stay
2m8 Stay (Edited)
Stay Suite (Edited)
6. Entering Endurance
3m10 Entering Endurance
3m12 Down for the Long Nap
3m13 Message from Home
7. Through the Wormhole
3m9 Docking
3m14 Through the Wormhole (Edited)
4m16A Atmospheric Entry (Edited)
8. Those Aren’t Mountains
4m16B They’re Not Mountains
9. Messages from Home
4m17 Years of Messages (Edited)
Organ Variation (Suite) (Edited)
4m18 Afraid of Time
10. No Need to Come Back
5m20 No Need to Come Back (Edited)
5m22B We’re Running Out of Time
11. I’m Going Home
5m23 I’m Going Home (Edited)
12. Dr. Mann
6m24 Coward (Edited)
13. No Time for Caution
6m25 Imperfect Contact (Edited)
6m26 No Time for Caution
14. Detach
7m27 Detach
15. Quantifiable Connection
7m30 S.T.A.Y (Edited)
Organ Variation (Suite) (Edited)
8m31 Quantifiable Connection (Edited)
8m32 What Happens Now?
16. Where We’re Going
8m33 Where We’re Going

 

Motion picture artwork and photography © 2004 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. and Paramount Pictures Corporation. This compilation and cover artwork © 2024 Renovatio Records. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applicable laws. For promotional use only.

Renovatio Records [0-01702-19072]

Tuesday, January 16, 2024

Angels & Demons

 

Angels & Demons
(Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Music by
Hans Zimmer

Our first release of 2024 is the score for the 2009 action thriller Angels & Demons, by composer Hans Zimmer. The film is directed by Ron Howard and is based on the novel of the same name by best-selling author Dan Brown. A sequel to the 2006 film The Da Vinci Code, Angel & Demons has Tom Hanks reprising his role as Professor Robert Langdon, as he joins Dr. Vittoria Vetra, a CERN scientist played by Ayelet Zurer, in the search to recover a missing vial of antimatter, which has been planted somewhere in the heart of the Vatican City by a mysterious Illuminati terrorist, in the midst of a new Pope election. Supported by an impressive cast that includes, among others, the talents of Ewan McGregor, Stellan Skarsgård and Armin Mueller-Stahl, the film was an instant hit, quickly becoming one of the highest-grossing films of 2009. Critics regarded it as an improvement over its predecessor, thanks to its action-oriented pace, in spite of its silly plot and a number of implausibilities and bad character choices. At the end of the day, it cannot be denied that if you manage to shut down your brain and ignore much of its Catholic church propaganda, the film entertains seamlessly from beginning to end.

As expected, the music for Angels & Demons recycles much of the formula that Zimmer used in The Da Vinci Code, a Grammy and Golden Globe nominated score. The German composer puts much emphasis on string writing and choral opulence, though this time he reduced the size of the orchestra to chamber levels, with a heavier use of synthesizer performances. The score also counts with several solos by virtuoso violinist Joshua Bell, whose performances on most of the cues are superb, to say the least. Zimmer resorts to the famous “Chevaliers de Sangreal” main theme from The Da Vinci Code, turning it into the main theme of the Robert Langdon saga. This theme opens the Angels & Demons score ("Opening Title"), and makes several appearances throughout, sometimes played by Bell’s violin, while others featuring as a piano-led version (finale of “Air”), before rounding everything up in the final “Angels and Demons” cue. Many of the motifs from The Da Vinci Code also return, but perhaps the most significant of these is a cyclical five-note progression for the antagonists, this time being the Illuminati. This motif is quite omnipresent, making standout appearances backed by a powerful chorus in the cues “Opening Titles”, “Air”, and “Castel Sant’Angelo”. Additionally, Zimmer provides a new motif for the enigmatic Camerlengo (McGregor). This new theme is mostly played by Bell, making its appearance during “The Pope’s Tomb”, before being further explored in the impressive “Ascension” cue, arguably the highlight of the entire score. The action music conjured up by Zimmer is also one of the main attractions of the score, with cues such as “Earth”, “Air”, “Fire”, “Water”, and “Castel Sant’Angelo” offering propulsive rhythms and heart-pounding passages of an effective blend of orchestra, chorus and synthesized industrial music.

Zimmer’s score for Angels & Demons was released by Sony Classical in 2009 in the form of a rather short album that omitted several highlights of the score, while featuring some weird cue combinations, making the musical story structure difficult to grasp. Renovatio Records’ new album of the score addresses these issues, while incorporating almost 15 minutes of unreleased music and retaining as much of the chronological order as possible.


Track List:

1. Opening Title (4:03)
2. God Particle (5:37)
3. Do You Believe in God? (2:29)
4. Follow the Path of the Illuminati (2:46)
5. Earth (6:37)
6. Air (7:44)
7. The Pope's Tomb (4:58)
8. Fire (4:07)
9. Water (5:45)
10. Castel Sant'Angelo (7:18)
11. Ascension (8:47)
12. Immolation (3:38)
13. Lux Aeterna (3:00)
14. Angels and Demons (2:18)

Total Running Time: 69:07


Size: 360.1 MB
Files type: FLAC Audio File [.flac]
Channels: 2 (stereo)
Sample Rate: 44.1 KHz
Sample Size: 16 bit
Bit Rate: 1,411 kbps


Cover Artwork:





Credits:

Music Composed, Arranged and Produced by Hans Zimmer

Executive in Charge of Music for Columbia Pictures: Lia Vollack
Executive Album Producers: Ron Howard, Brian Grazer and John Calley

Violin Solos by Joshua Bell

Additional Music by Lorne Balfe and Atli Örvarsson
Ambient Music Design: Mel Wesson
Orchestration: Bruce Fowler
Music Supervision: Bob Badami
Music Editor: Daniel Pinder
Assistant Music Editor: Letitia Rogers

Soloists:
Guitar: Heitor Pereira
Cello: Martin Tillman
Percussion: Ryeland Allison and Satnam Ramgotra
Synthesizers: Hans Zimmer

Orchestra Principals:
Orchestra Leader: Endre Granat
Principal Violin: Julie Gigante
Principal Cello: Steve Erdody
Principal Viola: Brian Dembow
Principal Double Bass: Nico Abondolo
Principal Bassoon: Michael O'Donovan

Music Arranged by Julian Kershaw
Synth Programming: Matthe Margesson, Howard Scarr, Jacob Shea and Noah Sorota

Music Conducted by Nick Glennie-Smith
Music Recorded and Mixed by Alan Meyerson
Sequence Programming: Thomas Broderick and Peter Oso Snell
Digital Instrument Design: Mark Wherry
Additional Recording by Geof Foster, Todd Whitelock, Slamm Andrews, Jeffrey Biggers and Greg Vines
Music Production Services: Steven Kofsky
Score Coordinator: Andrew Zack
Sample Development: Claudies Bruese, Sam Estes and Michael Hobe
Technical Assistant: Andrew Kawczynski
Assistant Engineers: Katie Lewin and Adam Schmidt
Music Preparation: Booker White
Orchestra Contractor: Peter Rotter

Music Recorded at Sony Pictures Studios, Culver City, CA and Clinton Recorded Studio, New York, NY
Music Mixed at Remote Control Productions, Santa Monica, CA
Studio Manager for Remote Control Productions: Czarina Russell

Score Published by New Columbia Pictures Music, Inc., admin. by Sony/ATV Tunes LLC (ASCAP)


Cue Assembly:

Track Title

Slate Number & Cue Title

1. Opening Title

1m0 Logos

1m1 Smashing the Ring

2. God Particle

1m3-4 CERN (Edited)

3. Do You Believe in God?

1m7 Sistine Chapel

2m11 Access Granted (Edited)

4. Follow the Path of the Illuminati

2m12 Follow the Path

5. Earth

3m15 No Time (Edited)

3m16 Cock Block

3m16B Pantheon (Edited)

3m17B Earth (Edited)

6. Air

3m19 Air (Edited)

7. The Pope’s Tomb

Camerlengo Suite (Edited)

4m25A Black Tongue A (Edited)

8. Fire

5m28A Strauss Eligible (Edited)

2m13 Seal the Doors (Edited)

5m27 Fire (Edited)

9. Water

5m29 Cross Rome

6m30 Water (Edited)

10. Castel Sant’Angelo

3m18 Black Smoke A

5m31B Castle SantAngelo (Edited)

6m33 Save Camerlengo (Edited)

11. Ascension

6m38 God Save Us

12. Immolation

7m43 Immolation

13. Lux Aeterna

7m44 Science and Religion

7m45 Lux Aeterna

14. Angels and Demons

7m46 Main Title


Motion picture artwork and photos ©2009 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. Cover artwork ©2024 Renovatio Records.
All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applicable laws. For promotional use only.

Renovatio Records [0-01702-19073]