Description
This is Elfman at his best. Working on this project for a solid two years, as opposed to the usual soundtrack deal of three months on a movie, the sound-scape of this album is so varied and dynamic it’s hard to comprehend the awesomeness on a first listen. A homage to the scores of movies, this soundtrack draws upon references and reinvents popular and stereotypical movie music styles. There are shout outs to jungle blockbusters like Indiana Jones and King Kong (‘Snake Women’, ‘Patterns’), Gothic and magical scores such as The Nightmare Before Christmas and Edward Scissorhands (‘Silent Movie’, ‘The Twins’), the schmooze vibe tones of the trendy 20’s (‘Film Noir’, ‘Movie Studio’), and a tour-de-force homage to the syncopated beats of West Side Story (‘Rooftops’). Despite their influences, all the tracks inherently original, and the experience is incredible. I’m actually running out of inventive words to use to describe it. The upbeat ‘Kiriki’ theme is a brilliant fusion of exhilarating rhythmic strings with bows on fire in a distinctly circus and Gothic vibe, and ‘Scarlett Balancing’ is simply heartbreaking – the lyrics have the potential to be corny and pandering but in this case they come across as esoteric and nebulous combined with the luscious arrangement of the orchestra and the ethereal mixing of the choir.
The most coruscating moment on the album is the exquisite and flawless ‘The Broom/Flying Scarlett’ arrangement. Beginning with a reprise of the opening tune shared delicately between woodwinds and a solo violin while strings flourish softly behind, the piece is utterly stunning. It provokes this incredible but practically indescribable emotion that resembles something like yearning. It’s an ephemeral and achingly beautiful piano waltz paired with this forlorn, angelic voice which fragments and harmonizes itself, and slowly layers with chimes and glockenspiels which leads into the striking, driving and powerful orchestra finally taking over. The arrangement is sweeping.
It’s been way too long since a soundtrack, and a Cirque du Soleil one at that, has moved and resonated with me. It’s been an absolute joy to discover this wonderful soundtrack. Danny Elfman has managed to bring his own style to Cirque du Soleil without alienating or messing up its typical world flavour, and the melodies and motifs he has crafted are some of the most beautiful I think I’ve ever heard in a soundtrack. Iris is simply stunning – to all Elfman fans, soundtrack aficionados, and music lovers, you will not regret listening to this. Simply worldclass quality – it’s good to see that the Machine du Soleil can still produce magic with the right direction.