To paraphrase Frodo Baggins: It has been 11 years since The Return of the King, and the wound has never fully healed. When all will have been said and done about the Middle-Earth sextology, Howard Shore will be remembered as one of the few members of the creative team who has never, ever lost sight of the heart in Tolkien's stories.
For Battle Of The Five Armies, the same scoring process was put into motion as on Desolation Of Smaug. Howard Shore penned his thematic ideas, had them approved by Peter Jackson, and then proceeded to put down the score onto paper in New York, which was then forwarded to Conrad Pope, who finished the full orchestrations according to Shore's sketches, and conducted the music in Wellington, New Zealand, with Peter Jackson in the booth. Sessions took place in September, with a few pick-ups in October. As with Desolation Of Smaug, the score was locked at that point, and was then editorially conformed for the final cut of the film. The result in Desolationof Smaug was a film version of the score, which was in major parts chopped apart and dialed out, hurting the pace of the movie in some scenes, which could have been avoided, had Jackson and the studio scheduled additional scoring sessions for rewrites, as it was the case with every Ring film, including An Unexpected Journey.
The film result is just as chaotic this time, and you have to decide for yourself if the eradication of scoring up until the last minute, which is also what made Lord of the Rings so refined, and the channeling of Peter Jackson's demands to the conductor's podium through someone that is not Howard Shore, is hitting a problematic spot with you, since there undoubtedly are small orchestration choices in these final two Tolkien scores that are not Shore's, and I think you can definitely hear it to some extent.
The flipside of the whole process is of course that the early finishing of recording sessions allows for a more straightforward album presentation, and a more accurate picture of what is actually in the film, whereas the Lord of the Rings albums (on just one disc too) featured mostly alternates, since the albums had to be locked while scoring was moving into the hottest phase.
The Battle Of The Five Armies album presentation is the same as the previous two albums. Two discs, two versions, with expanded tracks for the limited edition, and an additional booklet. The movie is the shortest of all six Rings films, but it's still surprising that the album is the shortest of the three, with around 95 minutes of score (excluding bonus tracks and Boyd's song) on the special edition. The film is scored almost wall to wall, so there is a good amount, maybe 15 minutes, missing. The tone of the album is mostly very grim, dark, and brutal, and differs from the past two in this regard. There is also significantly more choral work in this score - sadly still without featured soloists, but grand nonetheless.
The album opens with a real stunner, Fire And Water, scoring Smaug's attack on Lake-Town, and his demise. Also shorter on album, it is still a six minute powerhouse with a chilling choral climax, and one of the biggest highlights on the album. We get an intermezzo of reprised Tauriel and Kili music in Shores of the Long-Lake, followed by a new and utterly beautiful theme on solo string and flute for Bard's leadership, before the album shifts into martial mode, and, save for a few breaks, doesn't leave it until Courage and Wisdom.
Highlights are the opening minute of Beyond Sorrow and Grief, which must be some sort of definition for "epic", the way Shore mingles his themes "House of Durin", "Erebor", and "Thorin", backed by resounding male chorus; then a militaristic incarnation of "Erebor" in The Ruins of Dale, and of course any statement of the Woodland Realm theme, which leaves its etheral self behind and shifts, much like everything in this score, into battle mode, accompanied by other recurring motifs, most notably the one playing when the dwarves are thrown into their cells in DoS. Speaking of recurring motifs, it is once again amazing to hear Shore weave his carpet of themes, as if they were always meant to culminate in this, and no other, way. You think you've heard it all every time, and every time you're proven wrong. Guardians of the Three is especially fascinating in this regard. Shore reuses the evil motif from Sauron appearing in DoS, and the Witch King appearing in Minas Morgul in Return of the King, in an eerie fashion, and turns it into a sort of "Sauron Rising" theme. Lothlorien is mingling in counterpoint with the Necromancer skip-beat, the Rivendell arpeggios are heard under a worn statement of Gandalf's theme, and the "Power of Galadriel" music from Fellowship of the Ring reappears. In this regard, BOTFA is similar to Return of the King, in that it doesn't mainly introduce new themes, but develops and mingles the established ones. One should, however, not make the mistake and expect a score in the tone and scope of Return Of The King. These scores are a build-up to LotR, they aren't meant to top them in magnitude. It doesn't mean there are no magnificent moments in the battle, or no choral highlights, but not in the style of Return of the King's grand finale(s).
The Darkest Hour, The Fallen, Sons of Durin, to name some, are all absolute highlights, and will give you chills up and down your spine, but if you look for eruptions of unabashed orchestral and choral grandeur with Wagnerian magnitude, you need to listen to Return of the King, not Battle of the Five Armies. The finale of Lord of the Rings is epic and emotional. The finale of Battle of the Five Armies is brutal. That's the difference. To The Death brings harsh brass, and relentless rhythms (think of the music for Aragorn fighting Lurtz, paired with Legolas fighting Bolg, amped up times ten), before it gives us a martial, and wet-your-pants awesome, statement of Nature's theme, followed by the Eagles' music from the film version of An Unexpected Journey, and finally a tormented choral piece, with soprano, that could possibly creep you out, which ends with some massive chords.
There are countless other details to mention: the goblin motif from An Unexpected Journey Returns, there is a new motif for Gundabad, a new theme for Bard's family (on gorgeous sopranos in Fire And Water), Bilbo's sneaky theme returns, and there is a new amazing theme for Dain Ironfoot, featured in the fantastic Battle for the Mountain, giving the dwarves a Celtic flavour with bagpipes, one of the few remaining colours Shore has not explored already for these films. The theme from An Unexpected Journey for the conflict between elves and dwarves also makes a poignant return. One of the most central themes of this score is still Smaug's material, which is continued in its use for Thorin's gold sickness, drawing the parallel to Smaug.
The real genius in this score is the way Shore closes out the story of the Hobbit, and segues into Fellowship of the Ring in the last two score tracks. There And Back Again closes with a familiar Ring theme statement, and the Shire theme on strings, which brilliantly finishes on the first chord of the Fellowship theme, teasing it, and creating its conclusion in the finale of Fellowship of the Ring. Some may find it too subtle, I think it's brilliant. The closing song is given to us by Billy Boyd, and even though I found it somewhat boring at first, it grew on me immensely, with its touching lyrics, and finally some orchestral dignity instead of strumming street artists and Jackson's friends. The two bonus tracks are a theme presentation (Dragon Sickness), and music from the Desolation of Smaug Extended Edition, which wasn't even featured mostly, and even includes music for a cut scene, namely Gandalf looking into the Palantir.
A bit curious is the drier mixing of the score, especially the percussion, compared to its predecessors, but it's nothing that will be noticed by most people.
I will say that the three Hobbit albums, disregarding the chaotic film version of An Unexpected Journey, present us a fluid work that is, in terms of complexity, skill and execution, on par with Lord of the Rings. It may not be as popular as Rings, which is sadly a byproduct of the films not reaching old heights, and the fact that you cannot recreate the surprise factor, but the feat is just as impressive. Special credit must be given to Howard Shore that he didn't go the obvious road, and made this trilogy, and especially The Battle Of The Five Armies, so epic that it's on the same scale as Return of the King, but that he retained artistic integrity and treated it as what it is, namely a precursor to Lord of the Rings.
Thank you, Howard, for 16 hours of incredible music that can rightfully be called the best in cinema history.
Image Unavailable
Image not available for
Color:
Color:
-
-
-
- Sorry, this item is not available in
- Image not available
- To view this video download Flash Player
The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies - Motion Picture Soundtrack
Special Edition
2 CD
$12.49$12.49
See all 9 formats and editions
Hide other formats and editions
| Listen Now with Amazon Music |
|
The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
"Please retry" | Amazon Music Unlimited |
| Price | New from | Used from |
|
MP3 Music, December 9, 2014
"Please retry" | $9.49 | — |
|
Audio CD, Import, December 8, 2014
"Please retry" | $13.11 | $9.35 |
| Audio CD, Special Edition, Soundtrack, December 16, 2014 | $12.49 | — | $2.88 |
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
Page 1 of 1 Start overPage 1 of 1
Product details
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- Language : English
- Product Dimensions : 5 x 5.75 x 0.75 inches; 4.8 Ounces
- Manufacturer : Watertower Music
- Item model number : 30703008
- Date First Available : October 15, 2014
- Label : Watertower Music
- ASIN : B00OIG3CAC
- Number of discs : 2
- Best Sellers Rank: #121,156 in CDs & Vinyl (See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl)
- #1,434 in Movie Scores (CDs & Vinyl)
- #2,560 in Movie Soundtracks (CDs & Vinyl)
- #74,655 in Pop (CDs & Vinyl)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
4.8 out of 5 stars
4.8 out of 5
690 global ratings
How customer reviews and ratings work
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon
5.0 out of 5 stars
If This Is To End...
Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2015
The story is so engaging and the music makes it just that much better! This is Howard Shore at his very best and I am proud to say that I own this soundtrack. If you are a music and Middle Earth lover like me, this would make a great gift! It definitely captures the mood that this is the end of Middle Earth on the screen. But if this is to end, then let it end with a bang!
Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2015
Images in this review
-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 11, 2014
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 13, 2015
With his concluding score for Peter Jackson’s Hobbit trilogy, “The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies,” we assume that Howard Shore will finish his musical odyssey to J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle Earth, and with that comes the necessary and very deserved applause for a work very well done. It is now difficult to separate the six scores and judge them all by themselves, because as we take it now the intent is a musical landscape that stretches across six films, all in expanded forms (or soon will be) of what Jackson now sees as essentially one epic long tale, certainly this was the basis for his three film treatment of “The Hobbit,” and it worked. Thus the themes and motifs emerged in something of an inverted evolution…most of them coming in the earlier Ring trilogy, and reemerging in the Hobbit trilogy. But Shore went so much further than simply resetting existing themes and motifs to the earlier stories, a great deal of new music has also emerged here and wonderful it is. There has been some comment that Shore’s recent treatment is less thematic than the Ring trilogy which is not quite true, there are an abundance of themes and motifs throughout for Thorin, Erebor, Smaug, a very nice sequence for Ironfoot and his dwaves, and especially for Lake-Town and Bard, a theme which really comes into its own in the final film. The first and last in this list are particularly notable and quite memorable. The music for Erebor is distinctive, and that for the great dragon is remarkably inventive and effective. And by the way the production values for all of the Hobbit recordings are outstanding as is the packaging for Special Editions by Watertower Music. If there should be a question, one might ask what happened to the song of the Misty Mountains (Song of the Lonely Mountain) that really took so many of us by storm with the release of the first trailer for “An Unexpected Journey”? That theme really never reemerges in the third film. Now, it might be noted that the song as written by Tolkien in the text never reappears either, but it was such an important musical element in the first film and so memorable as well. Of course, until we see the extended version of the last installment all bets are off regarding comments on things that seem left out, we will not know for sure until later in 2015. Still, as is, this is a fine score that introduces music as good as anything in the entire Tolkien cycle, and a cycle it is as the last film brings us back to Gandalf’s visit to see Bilbo which rightly begins the Ring trilogy. And word must be added about the song “The Last Goodbye” which is both a proper end note and quite a nice touch as sung by Billy Boyd (Peregrin Pippin Took).
Taken all together, Jackson’s six films represent an incredible effort to lift Tolkien’s writings to the modern screen, they have not been perfect, and certainly purists have cause for discussion (if not a complaint or two). Ironically, Tolkien himself might have applauded Jackson’s efforts with the Hobbit trilogy since he had begun a process to update and tie the original book more closely to the Ring trilogy, and after all a good deal of the embellishments came from Tolkien’s appendices and other writings. Few authors have been honored in this way, and most of us have enjoyed greatly the journeys to Middle Earth, although at times we might describe it as wallowing, but in a very enjoyable manner. Sadly, the Hobbit trilogy has not received the positive attention given that for the Ring series, but it is considerable in so many ways, Bilbo is quite right, the Dwarves are given justice, and Smaug is really as he should be. And Shore has finished a long musical masterpiece, quite unlike any other film composer in history, with the possible exception of John Williams and “Star Wars” where at least one more time he will take us musically to stories long ago and far, far away (seven films all told). Now, will there be an effort to release the “full scores” for the Hobbit films? Well, it would be something to look forward to. For the moment, a job well done, and a hearty bravo to Howard Shore!!!!!
Taken all together, Jackson’s six films represent an incredible effort to lift Tolkien’s writings to the modern screen, they have not been perfect, and certainly purists have cause for discussion (if not a complaint or two). Ironically, Tolkien himself might have applauded Jackson’s efforts with the Hobbit trilogy since he had begun a process to update and tie the original book more closely to the Ring trilogy, and after all a good deal of the embellishments came from Tolkien’s appendices and other writings. Few authors have been honored in this way, and most of us have enjoyed greatly the journeys to Middle Earth, although at times we might describe it as wallowing, but in a very enjoyable manner. Sadly, the Hobbit trilogy has not received the positive attention given that for the Ring series, but it is considerable in so many ways, Bilbo is quite right, the Dwarves are given justice, and Smaug is really as he should be. And Shore has finished a long musical masterpiece, quite unlike any other film composer in history, with the possible exception of John Williams and “Star Wars” where at least one more time he will take us musically to stories long ago and far, far away (seven films all told). Now, will there be an effort to release the “full scores” for the Hobbit films? Well, it would be something to look forward to. For the moment, a job well done, and a hearty bravo to Howard Shore!!!!!
Top reviews from other countries
FloydFan1973
5.0 out of 5 stars
The final foray into Middle Earth... brilliant as always
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on December 26, 2014
What can I say, it's the last one. The last journey into Middle Earth, I thoroughly enjoyed this score as I have with all of Howard Shores Middle Earth epics.
While DoS remains my favourite of the three Hobbit scores this one has some excellent tracks my favourites include Shores of the Long Lake and The Gathering Clouds.
The main highlight from this album though is the brilliant end credits track by Billy Boyd, an inspired choice to have perform the last track for the Middle Earth films, beautifully recorded and sang it's both a joy to listen to but has that tinge of sadness knowing that this is the final journey.
While DoS remains my favourite of the three Hobbit scores this one has some excellent tracks my favourites include Shores of the Long Lake and The Gathering Clouds.
The main highlight from this album though is the brilliant end credits track by Billy Boyd, an inspired choice to have perform the last track for the Middle Earth films, beautifully recorded and sang it's both a joy to listen to but has that tinge of sadness knowing that this is the final journey.
One person found this helpful
Report
Adele
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great score, lacklustre film
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on December 28, 2016
Definitely worth getting if you liked Howard Shore's Lord of the Rings score, even if, like me, you're not a big fan of the film. The score is lovely, and this version comes in a lovely case!
One person found this helpful
Report
Jay Dunlop
5.0 out of 5 stars
A worthy prequel.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on January 3, 2015
Brilliant score as we have come to expect from Howard Shore. Containing musical links and refrains with shades of things to come in the continuing saga. Simply lovely to listen to and feeds the imagination. Recommended.
One person found this helpful
Report
Miriam
5.0 out of 5 stars
Billy Boyd...wow!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on December 8, 2014
Although I don't think any of the LOTR/Hobbit songs can compete with Neil Finn's Song of the Lonely Mountain, Billy Boyd's second contribution to Howard Shore's Tolkien scores showcases his beautiful voice perfectly. And as with the other two Hobbit films, Shore manages to create a distinctive score with just enough echoes of the LOTR to keep the continuity and feel of Middle Earth.
2 people found this helpful
Report
A. J. Montgomery
4.0 out of 5 stars
However none (in my opinion) are as excellent as the Lord of the Rings recordings
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on January 29, 2015
Much preferred this to the previous two discs for the Hobbit. However none (in my opinion) are as excellent as the Lord of the Rings recordings.
Open Web Player






