Logan: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack | |
Type: | film |
Artist: | Marco Beltrami |
Cover: | Logan soundtrack.jpg |
Released: | March 3, 2017 |
Recorded: | 2017 |
Genre: | Film score |
Logan: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the score album to the 2017 film of the same name, featuring the Marvel Comics character Wolverine. It is the tenth installment in the X-Men film series and the third and final installment in the Wolverine trilogy following (2009) and The Wolverine (2013). The film is directed by James Mangold, and featured musical score composed by Marco Beltrami, having previously worked together in the predecessor.
The original score was set to be composed by Cliff Martinez,[1] but due to creative differences, Beltrami took over the scoring duties and worked on the film score from January–February 2017. Lakeshore Records distributed and published the soundtrack, with licensing from Sony Classical Records and released in digital formats on March 3, 2017, alongside the film, and a physical CD release on March 31.[2] A deluxe edition of the soundtrack was also unveiled on April 21, featuring an additional track.[3] The score received positive critical reviews, with praise towards Beltrami's minimalistic musical approach and production.
In July 2016, Cliff Martinez was announced as the composer of Logan musical score.[4] [5] [6] In December 2016, Mangold announced that Marco Beltrami, who had previously collaborated with Mangold on 3:10 to Yuma (2007) and The Wolverine (2013), would take over from Martinez and score Logan instead.[7] [8] The score was recorded within two months at the Newman Scoring Stage in 20th Century Fox Studios. Due to the limited duration, Beltrami had to work extensively for the score.[9]
In an interview, Beltrami had stated "Jim [James] didn’t want a [traditional] thematic score — he wanted an emotionally supportive score. So there was a delicate balance, and I experimented with some unique instruments for it."[10] During the composition, he was asked to listen to film scores, such as Taxi Driver (1976), to describe about the 1970s jazz music and its intensity. He also tried to compose a similar thematic score, but eventually did not do so.[11] However, he captured the intensity of that score, as a result, he took a minimalistic musical approach. Beltrami used Western overtones to the score, devoid of traditional composition, an approach he did in The Wolverine (2013).
The track "Old Man Logan" included various instruments such as Hammond organ, glass harmonica, and drum kits as Beltrami wanted to create an organic approach to develop the score as "mysterious". Mangold had referenced Paper Moon (1973) and The Gauntlet (1977) as examples, which did not have a score, but described the analogies to Logan's relationship the young mutant girl, Laura. Beltrami said "Laura’s theme, meanwhile, was also based on organ and glass harmonica to musically unite her with Logan". He also added a two-note repetition that recurs several times, especially for the themes of Xavier and Caliban. For the former, he used a harmonic guitar, that lent a "soft, supernatural aura", and for the negative character Reavers and X-24 super Wolverine clone, he used a "low, menacing synthetic sound". In addition, he inversed the same theme for the action sequences, to connect those themes from the same family. The action music was subdued for most parts, except for few action sequence.
For the climax sequence, which Beltrami described it as "challenging", as it was the end of the film and the franchise, he played an epic score for the film, but also felt it had to be very "quiet and subdued" and was about "hitting the balance of not feeling forced and not leading the picture".[12]
Logan: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack was released digitally by Lakeshore Records on March 3, 2017 and a CD release on March 31, 2017. The deluxe edition of the soundtrack was later revealed on April 21. On July 19, 2017, at the San Diego Comic-Con event, special edition vinyl soundtrack of Logan featuring two-disc colored vinyl sets and artwork,[13] [14] was released alongside the vinyl edition of Deadpool soundtrack.[15] [16] Another vinyl edition was published by Lakeshore on August 11.[17]
Beltrami's musical score received critical acclaim, praising the composition and the minimalistic approach.[18] Jonathan Broxton, in his critical review, wrote "there will be a significant disconnect between it and those who grew up listening to Michael Kamen, John Ottman, and John Powell’s X-Men scores, because Beltrami’s Logan is just so different from anything we have heard in a super-hero movie before. On the one hand, this is commendable; bucking expectations and taking an entirely new approach to a well-defined musical genre is not an easy thing to do, but that’s exactly what Beltrami has done here. On the other hand, listeners will still need to be comfortable with music that shifts between being dissonant, ambient, and jazzy, and which has more in common with the work of Ennio Morricone, Jerry Fielding, Elliot Goldenthal, and Bernard Herrmann, than anyone who has scored a super-hero movie before. If you’re cool with that, then Logan will find a way to at least entertain you and allow you to experience its unusual tonal palette. If not, then you may find yourself recoiling in horror like Caliban from the sun, or experiencing a psychic attack of your own."[19]
Filmtracks.com wrote "The former is at least tolerable and marginally frightening. The other motifs are either obnoxious to the point of laughter or obtusely ineffectual due to pacing and subversion. Exercising some of this nightmarish musical environment is fine so long as it is used as counterpoint to the alternative, namely Logan's past. Without that disparity in battle within this film, there can be no proper emotional catharsis, and it makes for an extremely dull and mind-numbing album that conveys no narrative for the otherwise important closing chapter for two vital franchise characters. On the other hand, as critics noted about the film in general, kudos need to be supplied for taking a chance, and Beltrami responded to this unusual demand as best as anyone could have. While this music is less cohesive and tolerable than The Wolverine, it's at least more technically intelligent, and they thus receive the same rating. On album, though, be prepared for adamantium poisoning of your ears."[20]
Soundtrack Beat gave 8/10 to the film score and wrote "If music in every other X-Men movie was speaking, in “Logan” music is whispering. Music whispers all the anger and rage simmering inside Logan that it’s about to be unleashed. After all, the movie isn’t rated R without reason! Marco Beltrami succeeds in creating a believable and completely compatible musical environment for Logan, that it’s impossible to imagine the film without it. Marco Beltrami’s score is really the soul of the film."[21] Seattlepi
Chart (2017) | Peak position | |
---|---|---|
UK Soundtrack Albums (OCC)[23] | 31 | |
US Soundtrack Albums (Billboard)[24] | 21 |
Logan
Credits adapted from CD liner notes
Instrumentation