Search - Trevor Jones :: From Hell (Score)

From Hell (Score)
Trevor Jones
From Hell (Score)
Genres: Pop, Soundtracks
 
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #1

If twin-brother filmmakers Allen and Albert Hughes wanted to deliberately mess with their reputation as masters of the contemporary black urban milieu, they couldn't have chosen a better vehicle than a faithful adaptation ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Trevor Jones
Title: From Hell (Score)
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Varese Sarabande
Original Release Date: 10/19/2001
Re-Release Date: 10/16/2001
Album Type: Soundtrack
Genres: Pop, Soundtracks
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 030206629620, 4005939629625

Synopsis

Amazon.com
If twin-brother filmmakers Allen and Albert Hughes wanted to deliberately mess with their reputation as masters of the contemporary black urban milieu, they couldn't have chosen a better vehicle than a faithful adaptation of Alan Moore's graphic novel and its ominous exploits of notorious serial killer Jack the Ripper on the shadowy streets of Victorian London. This soundtrack album opens with the "Wormwood Remix" of Marilyn Manson's Holy Wood single "The Nobodies," an obvious bow to contemporary marketing that nevertheless sets the proper tone with its bleak ethos and jagged rhythms. But it's the dark, brooding score of largely unsung South African composer Trevor Jones that's the real focus here. Jones's masterful use of orchestral color and pacing, punctuated by slight percussive, choral, and electronic flourishes, paints a musical landscape as bleak as it is suspenseful. The composer's use of melody is spare, deliberate, and minor key, helping to infuse the score with a very human sense of melancholy even as it tightens the screws of dramatic tension. The concluding track, "Bow Belle (Absinthium)," offers up the strangest treat: a swirling, psychedelic cocktail of twisted, 19th-century ballroom gentility and contemporary digital sorcery that seems to crackle through a gramophone player. --Jerry McCulley

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CD Reviews

TRAILER MUSIC FROM HELL
wolf | FRANCE | 06/01/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"informations about the trailer music for you people. The real title is "REFLECT TREE WHISPERS" and it is from BILLY CORGAN, last song on stigmata's soundtrack. This trailer song is excellent."
Gothic Hell
Christopher Girvan | Menzies Creek- Australia | 12/17/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Trevor Jones' scores for the films, "Angel Heart","Mississipi Burning" and "Dark City" have their own intensity but if you found the musical brilliance of his score for "Merlin" more inspiring then this is the one for you. "From Hell" is a gothic masterpiece, filled with intense strings and a huge dark thunderous male choir.Trevor Jones has with this score joined the ranks of the great film score composers and I would compare this with the great Jerry Goldsmith's score for "the Omen" which deservedly won an Academy award. This is an enormous musical feast, enjoy."
A beautiful score...Perfect!
wolf | 07/25/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The horror/suspense genre has continually turned out some of the best film scores ever (think THE OMEN, ALIEN, INTERVIEW with the VAMPIRE, PSYCHO, JACOB'S LADDER, HELLRAISER II, etc.) yet its composers' work (Hermann, Goldenthal, Jarre, Young) goes largely overlooked and underappreciated. One of the masters of the genre (Howard Shore of David Cronenberg fame) got his due this past year (rightfully so) w/ his masterful score for LORD OF THE RINGS. However, 2001 also saw another masterful score from Trevor Jones, a man who hits a career high with his take on themes such as love, death, disease, desire, addiction, remorse, melancholy, and rememberence. To be sure, this is a "dark" score, as "high gothic" as any Requiem or cathedral in France. The score here expands past the limits of the film's narrative (that of Jack the Ripper) and soars into a larger territory, probing ultimately the dark & foggy territory of the lusciously unknown. Of course, we could do w/o the Manson song at the beginning (there to make some extra money for the studio no doubt) but the start of the score (track 2) more than makes up for this mistake, offering the listener a suite of sorts encompassing most of the themes and motifs to be elaborated on over the course of the entire score. Not only is this track worth the price of this cd but it also showcases why Trevor Jones now joins the ranks of the contemporary masters. (Also give a listen to Han Zimmer's score for HANNIBAL if you like this one.)"