Syndetics cover image
Image from Syndetics

The dark knight rises [sound recording] : original motion picture soundtrack / music composed by Hans Zimmer.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: MusicMusicPublisher number: WTM39313 | WaterTower MusicPublication details: Burbank, CA : WaterTower Music, p2012.Description: 1 sound disc : digital ; 4 3/4 inUniform titles:
  • Dark knight rises (Motion picture)
Subject(s):
Contents:
A storm is coming -- On thin ice -- Gotham's reckoning -- Mind if I cut in? -- Underground army -- Born in darkness -- The fire rises -- Nothing out there -- Despair -- Fear will find you -- Why do we fall? -- Death by exile -- Imagine the fire -- Necessary evil -- Rise.
Gavin Greenaway and Matt Dunkley, conductors.
Audiovisual profile: Click to open in new window
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult CD Adult CD Main Library CD SOUNDTRACK Dark Knight Rises Available 33111007404896
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

While Hans Zimmer's music for Christopher Nolan's Batman movies aren't as high-concept as some of his other scores, such as Inception or Gladiator, they're just as artfully done, and The Dark Knight Rises is no exception. Zimmer ties the music for the final installment of Nolan's Batman trilogy to his previous scores, but allows these pieces to have their own flourishes as well: "A Storm Is Coming" nods to the churning strings of the theme used since Batman Begins, but "Nothing Out There" adds an almost subliminal pulsing synth that grows stronger as the score unfolds, peaking with "Imagine the Fire"'s climax of choral vocals and strings. Meanwhile, heavy brass cuts through most tracks like a bat signal piercing through the clouds, nowhere more clearly than on "Gotham's Reckoning." Yet Zimmer doesn't just pile on the drama; he knows when to have his cues crash into a scene and when they should get out of the way. The drums, brass, and strings reach near-claustrophobic levels on "The Fire Rises," but they also retreat, roil, and then thunder to a close in malevolent and majestic fashion. Zimmer also finds room for some more experimental touches, as on "Despair," where the whooshing percussion sounds like a cape sweeping through the air or something bursting into flames. And while most of these cues tower like Gotham skyscrapers, "Mind If I Cut In?" is just as remarkable for its delicate melody and subtle percussion. Fittingly for the last installment of Nolan's -- and thus Zimmer's -- interpretation of Batman, many of the track titles wax philosophical ("Why Do We Fall?"), and the score's emotional range is narrow but deep, spanning the mournful "Born in Darkness" and the somber "Necessary Evil," and culminating with "Rise," which mingles haunting strings and vocals with formidable rhythms as the credits roll. While The Dark Knight Rises closes the book on Batman for Zimmer and Nolan, it's just another chapter in their thriving creative partnership. ~ Heather Phares

Enchanced CD.

Program notes on container insert.

A storm is coming -- On thin ice -- Gotham's reckoning -- Mind if I cut in? -- Underground army -- Born in darkness -- The fire rises -- Nothing out there -- Despair -- Fear will find you -- Why do we fall? -- Death by exile -- Imagine the fire -- Necessary evil -- Rise.

Gavin Greenaway and Matt Dunkley, conductors.

Powered by Koha