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Barnes and Noble

Everything Everywhere All at Once [Original Soundtrack]

Current price: $42.99
Everything Everywhere All at Once [Original Soundtrack]
Everything Everywhere All at Once [Original Soundtrack]

Barnes and Noble

Everything Everywhere All at Once [Original Soundtrack]

Current price: $42.99

Size: OS

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It may occur to those who see the award-winning indie smash (and aptly titled) that 's nearly two-hour soundtrack album is so symbiotic with the film's improbable, action-packed, threatening, heart-rending multiverse that it likely wouldn't hold up well on its own. It's impressive, then, to find that the score -- parts structured music, diegetic ambience, and noisy sound effects -- works as well as it does as music. Over three years in the making, bandmembers , , and -- all composers in their own right -- worked individually and together on the score under the guidance of the film's directors, ( and ). Entailing over 100 music cues, the final recording consists of 49 tracks, including a handful of songs and collaborative instrumentals. Among the eclectic songs are the tender pop single "This Is a Life" by , the sinuous "Fence" with , jaunty "Now We're Cookin'" with none other than , and the glitchier "Sucked into a Bagel" featuring actress . Other, more compositional collaborations include several tracks with , including the otherworldly "Jobu Tupaki," pieces with 's , and "Opera Fight," which joins 's warped atmospheres with vocalist and chamber sextet . A recurring classical theme, , is woven into segments of the score, including an eerie (treated) piano performance by jazz pianist . The vast majority of the score, however, consists of the trio's alternately ominous, sentimental, explosive, and spontaneous electro-chamber-rock creations, which distort traditional instruments into something alien and partly mechanical while, like their band albums, never fully detaching from organic matter. Both urgent and seeming to pause for a breath at once, the over-seven-minute "Come Recover (Empathy Fight)," for instance, floats gentle and percussive piano phrases over reverberating HVAC-type noises, melodic violin, and dissonant, unidentifiable shimmer before harp, manipulated drum kit, and eventual pulsing beats, distorted woodwinds, and group vocals join in. It's a track that could have appeared on trilogy of albums (2020-2021) but is tailored to the film's scene, operating as score as well as in-story effects. Even a track with a title like "What a Fast Elevator!" works as a warped chamber piece -- pan flute, ambient percussion, edited instrument samples, and all. 's part in may or may not have raised the game in scoring as much as the joyously absurdist film has defied limitations in storytelling, but at the very least, it's a brilliant pairing. ~ Marcy Donelson

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