Sherlock Holmes: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
 
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Sherlock Holmes: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
by Hans Zimmer
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
Price: $7.99
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Album Savings: $2.90 compared to buying all songs

  • Original Release Date: December 22, 2009
  • Format - Music: MP3
  • Compatible with MP3 Players (including with iPod®), iTunes, Windows Media Player
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MP3 Songs
Song TitleTimePrice
listen  1. Discombobulate 2:25$0.99Buy Track
listen  2. Is It Poison, Nanny 2:53$0.99Buy Track
listen  3. I Never Woke Up In Handcuffs Before 1:44$0.99Buy Track
listen  4. My Mind Rebels At Stagnation 4:31$0.99Buy Track
listen  5. Data, Data, Data 2:15$0.99Buy Track
listen  6. He's Killed The Dog Again 3:15$0.99Buy Track
listen  7. Marital Sabotage 3:44$0.99Buy Track
listen  8. Not In Blood, But In Bond 2:13$0.99Buy Track
listen  9. Ah, Putrefaction 1:50$0.99Buy Track
listen10. Panic, Shear Bloody Panic 2:38$0.99Buy Track
listen11. Psychological Recovery.....6 Months18:18Album Only
listen12. Catatonic 6:44$0.99Buy Track

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11 Reviews
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3 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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21 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Quirky music for The Great Detective, December 26, 2009
By Jon Broxton (Thousand Oaks, CA) - See all my reviews
This version of Sherlock Holmes is apparently the 223rd occasion the ubiquitous detective has been portrayed on either the big or small screen, but as far as I'm aware this is the first time Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's legendary character has been a traditional Hollywood action hero. A succession of actors - from Basil Rathbone to Peter Cushing and Jeremy Brett - have portrayed Holmes as a thoughtful, cultured, albeit rather eccentric English gentleman, and although Doyle's novels have often spoken of his prowess as a bare knuckle fighter and swordsman, as well as his drug use, Holmes was never an `action man' in the traditional sense. It seems the filmmakers have made a rather unfortunate misjudgment of character on this film, making this Holmes a young, bare-chested hunk rather than an analytical mind.

The film is directed by Guy Ritchie, the former husband of Madonna and the director of such popular hits as Lock Stock & Two Smoking Barrels and Snatch, and stars Robert Downey Jr. as Holmes and Jude Law as Holmes' faithful assistant and confidante, Watson. The plot revolves around the dastardly Lord Blackwood (Mark Strong), an occult-worshipping aristocrat who, following a series of brutal murders, is captured, tried and subsequently executed, but seemingly rises from the dead to continue his reign of terror. The film also stars Rachel McAdams as Holmes's American paramour Irene Adler, Eddie Marsan as Inspector Lestrade of Scotland Yard, and Geraldine James, Kelly Reilly, Hans Matheson, James Fox and William Hope in smaller roles. For the film's music, Ritchie turned to composer Hans Zimmer, who began his career in London with the late great Stanley Myers, and as such has an affinity for the city and its cultural heritage.

Zimmer's score is not what you would expect from a major Hollywood studio's key Christmas lynchpin film. The composer describes it as `the Pogues in Romania by way of an East End pub', and rather than being performed by a standard symphony orchestra, is instead a cultural mishmash of gypsy fiddles, banjos, cimbaloms and an out-of-tune piano, which Zimmer said was intended to illustrate both the "chaos in Holmes's head", as well as the film's period setting at the turn of the industrial revolution. Zimmer was also apparently inspired by the folk sounds of Kurt Weill's Threepenny Opera, which explores Victorian London's criminal underbelly in much the same way as Holmes does. Taking into account the obvious thought put into the creation of a unique sound, the resulting score is surprisingly easy to listen to and enjoy on its own terms, mainly because of its unashamed and unrestrained strangeness, and because it sounds so unlike most of Zimmer's most recent work.

The first thing listeners will find upon listening to the Holmes score is how much like the Jack Sparrow music from Pirates of the Caribbean it sounds. Like Sparrow's music, Zimmer's Holmes theme portrays the character as a comedic eccentric, but whose peculiar outward demeanor hides an inner strength. The spiky, slightly-drunken theme for fiddles, cimbaloms and accordions dances above a thrusting rhythm in the opening "Discombobulate", an energetic opening that certainly sets the tone of the score, and reoccurs later in the slightly more conventional "My Mind Rebels At Stagnation", the action-packed "Marital Sabotage" the stirring "Panic, Shear Bloody Panic", and the conclusive (and rather peculiar) "Catatonie". What's interesting about this theme, and about much of the score in general, is how off-kilter is all sounds. Instead of a smooth, constant sound, the strings have a scratchy, scrappy coarseness to them, while the accordions, banjos and various percussion items have a slightly broken sound, as though their pitch is a little off, or as if they are not being played properly. This is clearly not the case of course - scores such as this are intended to sound exactly the way they sound - but the cumulative effect of this is to make the score sound more than a little rough around the edges.

The tinkling cimbaloms are used in a more sinister manner in cues such as "Is It Poison, Nanny?", which have an unusual, scratchy electronic sound design element under the solo instruments, and which combine with deep bass chords to present a sense of impending menace. The second half of "My Mind Rebels At Stagnation", as well as cues such as "He's Killed The Dog Again", are similarly threatening, with an increased brass presence, dark electronic chords, buzzing violins, and multiple appearances of the famous de-tuned piano, which Zimmer personally detuned by throwing it down a set of stairs in the parking structure on the 20th Century Fox lot. At the other end of the scale, "I Never Woke Up In Handcuffs Before" is a crazy Romani-style dance for fiddles, accordion and an oompah tuba that picks up an exotic percussion beat half way through, and ends as a frenzied whirligig dance piece that would not sound of out place in a Turkish bazaar.

The main set piece of the score is the 18-minute "Psychological Recovery... 6 Months", into which Zimmer combines all the specific acoustic and electronic elements, the prancing Holmes theme, the banjos and fiddles and cimbaloms, and the cranky piano, but beefs up much of the music with some of the engaging action rhythms for which Zimmer is much more famous. He even finds time to work Irish pipes into his sound mix, which briefly recalls the work Zimmer did no An Everlasting Piece back in 2000. One absolutely wonderful touch comes 8 and a half minutes into the cue, when Zimmer works the Westminster Chimes melody (which precedes the hourly chimes of the clock of Big Ben) into his robust string ostinato. It's all very entertaining, and builds up to a thoroughly rousing, orchestrally-enhanced, and unexpectedly emotional conclusion as Holmes and his nemesis fight atop the still-under-construction Tower Bridge.

While Guy Ritchie's reworking of Sherlock Holmes might dismay the literary purists, and while Zimmer's score will likely make younger Zimmer fans scratch their heads in confusion, I personally found the score a refreshing change of pace, and a new sound from a man not known for breaking with convention that often. It took me a while to warm up to the score and to appreciate its nuances, but once you get past the initial reaction of "what the hell...?", there is a great deal of engaging music to be found. This is the kind of Zimmer music I like the most; the music that reminds us why he, above all his `underlings', is capable of writing genuinely good music, and why he continues to be held in such esteem.
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11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Great theme for the Great Detective!, December 26, 2009
Even the long-running BBC TV series failed to capture the period and character so perfectly as Hans Zimmer's theme for the the great detective. It is as catchy as one John Williams might have created with what might be a harpsichord and violin. Sweeping hauntingly Victorian you can almost feel the cobblestone beneath your feet listening alone, but at the same time modern and quirky. This is very much and example of Zimmer's best work so far since Gladiator....loved it! Loved it! One complaint I have about the soundtrack is not an evaluation of Zimmer's work, but the film includes the Road to Dublin by "the Dubliners" in the backstreet boxing-brawl match, which is inspired...but was not added to this Download/CD. Look that one up.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars To those looking for the "Celtic Songs" in the film..., January 9, 2010
By Amelia Ann Favere (Takoma Park, MD USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The song is "The Rocky Road to Dublin" by The Dubliners. Great track--but not on the album.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Not 5.1
The CD promises a 5.1 Surround Sound download. The provided download is not 5.1 at all; it's 2-channel WAVs, which you are encouraged to play under Dolby PL II, just as you can... Read more
Published 1 month ago by HandsOfFate

4.0 out of 5 stars It's Elementary, But It's Satisfactory
Fact: Hans Zimmer is one of the defining composers in Hollywood.
Fact: This is nothing like Zimmer has ever done before. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Flap Jackson

5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best soundtracks of 2009!
A good soundtrack not only accompanies a movie, but goes so far as to elevate it as well. Sherlock Holmes features precisely one such soundtrack. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Benjamin Grimes

5.0 out of 5 stars A Summer Score In The Winter. Zimmer Strikes Gold With Unique Instrumentation For A Jolly Good Time
Hans Zimmer explodes into adventure with his highly entertaining and very unique score to Sherlock Holmes. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Kaya Savas

3.0 out of 5 stars The celtic songs??
Are they anywhere on this soundtrack?
Those are the ones I wanted to buy!
Published 2 months ago by Jessica Zickefoose

1.0 out of 5 stars Gave me a headache and made a okay movie even worse
From the moment the hideously out-of-tune piano, cimbalom, etc. began bombarding (invading) the acoustical environment of the theater, I found my self continuously checking to see... Read more
Published 2 months ago by BookMan

5.0 out of 5 stars Not your typical "Hans Zimmer" score!
I just saw Sherlock Holmes this afternoon and the minute the movie started, I was instantly hooked. I've never read a Sherlock Holmes story and knew right away that this wasn't... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Nando Prudhomme

4.0 out of 5 stars Fun
This music isn't as good without the movie, but its fun, slightly psychotic sounding, energetic, dark and delightful. I love the peculiar blend of instruments. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Anglobotomy

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