sorei
08-29-2010, 07:41 PM
Finding Neverland - Jan A.P.Kaczmarek (2004)




23@320 / 138 MB


http://www.mediafire.com/?irr52k0j7wewmj1

PW 1SoRei7

tracklist:
1. Where is Mr. Barrie?
2. The Park
3. Dancing With the Bear
4. The Kite
5. The Chess
6. Neverland - Piano Variation in Blue
7. The Spoon on the Nose
8. The Pirates
9. The Marriage
10. Children Arrive
11. Drive to the Cottage
12. The Peter Pan Overture
13. Peter
14. The Park on Piano
15. The Stairs
16. Impossible Opening
17. The Rehearsal
18. Neverland - Minor Piano Variation
19. The Play and The Flight
20. This is Neverland
21. Why Does She Have To Die?
22. Another Bear
23. Forgotten Overture

review
Bolstered by a winning performance by Johnny Depp, Finding Neverland is being heralded as one of the best films of this year, which I would agree with. It is quite engaging for its full running time, has an excellent pace and writing, the characters always seem truthful in their actions and behavior and there is a sense of magic about the film. Much of this credit can also be presented to Jan A.P. Kaczmarek. His score as heard in the film works wonders, remaining subtle and understated yet strongly supporting each scene with heartfelt emotion.
The album begins with "Where Is Mr. Barrie?". Pizzicato strings, chimes and piano bound about like giddy children. More strings and woodwinds join, all in high registers, the energy consistent, and then this is all augmented by a sprightly boys choir. The style is pleasant light classical, but with a dollop of mischief added. "The Park" stays in the upper registers with strings, flutes and oboes and what sounds like a pennywhistle, to underscore J.M Barrie's Scottish heritage. "Dancing With The Bear" scores the first scene of Barrie showing the children the all-encompassing power of their imagination, as his faithful dog magically is seen as a giant waltzing bear, all accompanied by a Russian-influenced tune. High range strings and piano soar sweetly in "The Kite", while "The Chess" presents the main theme in a plaintive setting and this then leads directly into "Neverland – Piano Variation In Blue", a gorgeous piano solo variation of the same thematic material.
The fun, playful side is explored again in "The Pirates", as Barrie leads the children and their imagination on a grand pirate journey, highlighted by strident brass and strings. The more adult, dramatic aspects of the story are heard in "The Marriage", a sad, melancholy cue for strings, harp and woodwinds, painting a portrait of how his relationship with his wife slowly deteriorated as he spent more time with the widow's children. "The Children Arrive" revisits the sprightly melodic material from the first track, as solo piano dances along in the upper registers in order to accompany a group of orphans invited to witness the opening of Barrie's play, Peter Pan.
"The Peter Pan Overture" is actually performed on screen by the pit orchestra for the aforementioned opening night of Barrie's masterpiece, and is also based on the light, innocent textures of "Where Is Mr. Barrie?". The solo piano returns in "The Park on Piano", a lovely variation on the pennywhistle/woodwind melody heard in the short track "The Park" and endemic to the album, not heard in the film itself. The orchestra returns in "The Stairs", in the more melancholy vein, but then brightening into "Impossible Opening" as a delightful waltz tempo playfully takes over, soaring through the strings, woodwind and piano. Acoustic guitar highlights the measured pace of "The Rehearsal", while "Neverland – Minor Piano Variation" is another winning piano solo of grace and tenderness.
"This is Neverland" begins gently with subtle high strings and mid-range flute, before the playful side cautiously emerges, the pennywhistle and woodwinds join in and all sections soar in representation of visiting Neverland for the first time. The thematic material is culled from the "Neverland – Piano Variation In Blue" track, but heard here in a full orchestral guise and is all the more magical because of it. The boys choir returns in "Why Does She Have To Die?", a very affecting and glowing cue. "Another Bear" is an extended, bolder variation on the earlier cue "Dancing With A Bear", still in the waltz tempo and slight Russian flavor and then finally the album closes with the "Forgotten Overture", itself imbued with giddy, child-like energy presented in woodwinds first and then into strings and boys choir. This mirrors the textures heard in the opening track and is a fine way to round off a fine score, which is emotional without being sappy or syrupy, has marvelous piano solos and charming sense of wonder throughout.

fumoffu
08-30-2010, 01:10 AM
Thank you for posting the Finding Neverland soundtrack with its amazing piano solo tracks!

I really liked the movie and definitely noticed the soundtrack when watching it, but you made me discover how good it is. The first track reminded me of the compositions of Danny Elfman in Edward Scissorhands and the entirety of the soundtrack was bliss. I could listen to it for hours.

Would you happen to know of any similar soundtracks with great piano solos and "light-hearted" compositions?

sorei
08-30-2010, 09:40 AM
"Winter Guest" comes to mind with Piano, (Michael Kamen, VS), I will have to think about this... a good thing you posted your question over at the orchestral thread too.

I usually do not pay that much attention to the instruments while listening, just enjoying the moment. But I'll think about it.
:)

fumoffu
08-30-2010, 01:42 PM
Thank you, I'll check it out.

B.J.5555
09-01-2010, 09:57 AM
Michael Nyman's GATTACA is worth checking out for amazing piano work. As is Alexandre Desplats' BENJAMIN BUTTON and AFTERWARDS

Tumas-Muscat
02-28-2012, 08:42 PM
Could someone please re-upload this?

Thanks in advance :D

DAKoftheOTA
02-28-2012, 09:32 PM
I second the re-up. Also, does anyone happen to have the FYC Academy Promo?

sorei
02-28-2012, 09:34 PM
will reup asap, check the thread in 2 days or so.... :)

Tumas-Muscat
03-01-2012, 08:23 AM
Brilliant! Thank you so much! :D

Cloudbase
03-10-2012, 07:26 PM
Many thanks for this, much appreciated!

mallachain
03-10-2012, 08:31 PM
Thanks!

xphile7777
06-19-2012, 06:29 AM
Thanks! :)

zoeeloise
11-04-2012, 04:06 AM
Thank you!

Lashrito
11-05-2012, 05:38 AM
Thanks :)

DAKoftheOTA
11-06-2012, 12:37 AM
Little did I know this actually is the FYC Promo when I posted back in February. I received the physical FYC disc in the mail today, still sealed, and the tracklists match. They're identical.

sorei
11-06-2012, 12:42 AM
...sure about this? My cd cover sais original motion picture soundtrack....?

DAKoftheOTA
11-06-2012, 12:56 AM
Omm...positive lol. I'm holding it in my hands right now

---------- Post added at 06:56 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:51 PM ----------

The artwork is like a Turquoise and reads exactly as follows:

For your cinsideration

FINDING
NEVERLAND

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
Jan A.P. Kaczmarek

Only everything is centered, of course. Solid Turquoise background

sorei
11-06-2012, 01:00 AM
so promo and soundtrack are identical???

zoeeloise
11-07-2012, 07:49 PM
Have you tried Cracks by Javier Navarrete (2009)? It features some really haunting piano music. Also, the soundtrack to Creation (2010) by Christopher Young has an amazing track - The Ghost Pavane (Track #2).

Can probably upload either one or both for you, though they may be a lower quality mp3 - not sure if they're 320 or not....

florrent
02-23-2013, 01:19 PM
Thanks Sorei, incredible film and soundtrack

anakinbetrayal
08-14-2014, 02:08 PM
Thank you for this wonderful score. Just watched the movie....

Loumpakt
09-11-2014, 10:08 AM
thanks

Torak
01-01-2015, 10:31 PM
Thank you!