• Moving away from here
  • The E.P. Roundup
  • Griffin House: Lost & Found
  • Patti Smith: Twelve
  • Bryan Ferry: Dylanesque
  • Trisha O'Keefe: Star Burns Brightest
  • Amanda Marshall: Everybody's Got A Story
  • Feist: The Reminder
  • Bear McCreary: Battlestar Galactica Season 2 (Score)
  • Amy Winehouse: Back to Black
  • Tuesday, April 17, 2007

    Bear McCreary: Battlestar Galactica Season 2 (Score)

    Battlestar Galactica: Season 2 (Score) I won't lie. This is a chance for me to write about two things I love: BSG and TV/Film scores.

    Bear McCreary, for 3 seasons has been tasked with producing the scores to Battlestar Galactica. Building on what was created by Richard Gibbs in the Miniseries, McCreary's work has touched on nearly all aspects of world music to create a lush, exciting musical background for TV's best SciFi (and, arguably, best drama).

    Season 2's disc starts out with a rework of the old (70s) Battlestar Galactica's theme to play the part of the Colonial Anthem, and suddenly, what was once hokey is now a beautifully orchestrated and arranged piece of music.

    Many of the album's tracks, including A Promise to Return, Allegro, Reuniting the Fleet, and Worthy of Survival, all build on themes which McCreary original composed in Season 1. They tend to feel a bit repetitive in the scheme of things, but are no less beautiful.

    Some of the more original tracks are the reason this is one of my most listened to albums week after week. The musical theme for the not-allowed-to-happen relationship between Roslin and Adama is beautiful, crafted to convey love, and also containing a pinch of the pain that comes from knowing that love will never be.

    Meanwhile, the main theme to episode 16 in Season 2 is Black Market, which meshes hard rock with beautiful middle eastern tones to create what I can only describe as "bad-ass."

    Of course, my hands-down-favourite track on the disc is Prelude to War. The track builds in a way which can, in fact, be described as preparing for battle (or, yes, a prelude to war). The use of drums and strings in the piece create a tense, high energy 8.5 minutes which, if you ever have watched the show, make you wish you were in the cockpit of a viper. I know I drive my car that way.

    In the end: Obviously this is a niche piece. I get that. But, if you've never seen BSG but still enjoy TV/Movie scores, check it out. Of course, if you're as hooked as I am, you'll do anything you can do to get any and every piece of BSG action.

    Technorati Tagged: | | TV Score | 2006