ATLANTIS - THE LOST EMPIRE (2001) - James Newton Howard - Soundtrack Suite

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Uploaded by on Mar 31, 2011

James Newton Howard returns as the composer for Disney's annual, animated feature film, Atlantis: The Lost Empire. Sporting the ever-popular combo of CG and traditional animation, Atlantis has become another highly anticipated adventure from the Disney machine. Foregoing the Broadway-musical angle, featuring a half-dozen vocal performances, as was so common in the Nineties for the company, Disney chooses again to employ the talents of Howard and allow his talent for composition to help give the images further depth and personality.

The score is easily divided into two portions. The first half of the CD features Howard's recognizable, bombastic, adventure music. The second is considerably more subdued but mysteriously and exotically reflects the almost alien-like element of Atlantis and its inhabitants. The soundtrack begins with an average-at- best tune Where the Dream Takes You (1) performed by pop-vocalist Mya and co-written by Diane Warren. After this little faux pas; however, the CD presents Howard's selected compositions in chronological order.

Tracks 1 through 8, once again, fully demonstrate James Newton Howard's ability to deliver high powered, adventurous music. With only a few breathers, namely track 6, Bedding Down, the first nine tracks are filled with some very potent music - possibly a bit too potent for the onset of a soundtrack. Within the barrage, the listener does get a couple full statements of the heroes' main theme as in: The Submarine (2) and The Leviathan (4). There is only the briefest indications of the some of the wonderful motifs and themes to come. While many appreciate and applaud a strict chronological presentation of a film's music, in this case, such an ordering does not provide the optimum listening experience. It isn't until track 6 that one can take in the slightest breath and begin to digest the music being heard. The overall effect makes this soundtrack heavy on the front-end and can simply wear the unsuspecting listener out...before the true character of the score is even presented.

The second half the this disc is where things become interesting. As the lost city becomes the focus and setting for the continuing adventure, the music becomes much more colorful. Howard takes a sharp turn towards the mysterious when track 9, Milo Meets Kida starts. A dark and mysterious atmosphere permeates the music as haunting vocals, driving percussions, and wood wind accents become the dominant features. The occasional string swell or blast of brass keeps the adventure going, but the score has already taken on a much different personality. This is where Atlantis will win the listener over. James Newton Howard brings together the ancient-feeling of Dinosaur and the ethereal components of Snow Falling on Cedars: harps, tubular bells, glass percussions. The final effect is stunning and only interrupted a few times by the comic motifs common to most animated films. The melody found in Where Your Dreams Take You is only heard twice and very briefly. Both times the melody is softly played on guitar: track 6 and later at the conclusion of track 17 . It's sparse and subtle use are hardly enough to make a strong tie to Mya's performance and comes off as being forced into Howard's score.

In the final analysis, Atlantis: The Lost Empire contains some of James Newton Howard's most creative music to date. His musical description of the lost city and its inhabitants is, at times, nothing short of breathtaking. As demonstrated by the first half of the CD, Howard is likewise a master of the bombastic as evidenced in so many of his previous scores such as Vertical Limit.
(http://www.tracksounds.com/reviews/atlantis.htm)

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  • THANKS SO MUCH FOR MAKING THIS!~

  • I've loved this movie since I could even remember! THANK YOU SO MUCH! :D I just finished watching this and every time still it makes me feel like a little kid again! Listening to it makes me think of the Mummy movies becuse the score sounds very similar to it! AGAIN. THANK YOU SOOOO MUCH

    One of my favorite Disney Movies of all time <3

  • THANK YOU SO MUCH for sharing this. Finally someone decent on YouTube to post this glorious Sound Track, of this awesome movie, in this quality and in its extended version! You're great!

  • Well done.... again...! :) Following the great Ennio Morricone, Newton-Howard is my favorite composer -.-

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