Came across this on a music site I read and found it interesting....
http://www.newmusicbox.org/chatter/chatter.nmbx?id=5347
Quote:
Last night while indulging my Project Runway obsession, a trailer for Tim Burton's Sweeney Todd took over the airwaves and giddiness ensued. Really, I was beyond excited by the prospect of running out to my local cineplex and shelling out $11 to see Johnny Depp as the infamous demon barber of Fleet Street. However, this morning my bubble of enthusiasm was abruptly burst. Let me explain: Today's mail sack included a promo copy of the film's soundtrack, which was immediately inserted into the player after shredding through the shrink-wrap. Expecting to hear something along the line of the piercing opening sonority from Jonathan Tunick's original orchestration, I listened with mounting trepidation. About halfway through the organ prelude, I realized that my ears were not going to be blasted by any jarring timbres.
In fact, you could tell by the predictable swell in the music exactly where the opening title would dominate the movie screen. The music seemed safe, recognizable, with a clichéd touch of evil, but hardly sinister in a visceral sense. This was Sweeney-lite, all sharp edges sanded down, a mere Nescafé of Sondheim's more raucous Broadway rendition. Then came the song "No Place Like London," and the Disneyization of the music continued. To see if things might get a little ugly, or at least musically emote with the slightest touch of abandonment, I skipped ahead to "A Little Priest." Nope. The score seems to be meticulously crafted to the point of being too glossy for my taste. I know I shouldn't base my expectations on the original version, but it's an inevitable human trait that's difficult to suppress. That said, I'll probably be in line at the cinema opening weekend. I'm sure that once onscreen Helena Bonham Carter will make me forget all about my nostalgia for Angela Lansbury—fingers crossed.
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This news isn't really surprising to me, especially based on the things I've heard so far. That's not necessarily bad though: the darker aspects of Sweeney Todd may very well be expressed through the film medium in ways that live theatre can't, and therefore it may have been less necessary to use the music in such a matter. Still...the music is a big part of why I love the show so much.
The fan of Sondheim's Sweeney Todd in me is cautiously optimistic about the movie.
The fan of the general Sweeney Todd story in me is confident that I'll find the movie thoroughly entertaining.
If that makes any sense.