VIBES (1988) - James Horner - Soundtrack Score Suite
This video is dedicated to @apxstitch. :-)
Vibes: (
James Horner) There are only two groups of people in the world who would have any reason to even want to remember the
1988 movie Vibes:
Cyndi Lauper fans and James Horner fans. The film was, for some reason, backed by
Ron Howard's
Imagine Entertainment production company, with a horrendous script from two of the co-writers of
Howard's Splash who were attempting, probably, to take advantage of the resurfacing popular interest in parapsychology and the supernatural (spearheaded by the wildly successful
Ghostbusters). The premise of the film involves two psychicly gifted characters, one a hair-stylist played by
Lauper and the other a museum expert played by
Jeff Goldlbum. They are conned into seeking adventure in
Ecuador, thinking that they'd be helping someone find a lost child when indeed their psychic powers would be needed on a perilous mission to find a mystic pyramid and unlock its powers. Along the same idea as
Romancing the Stone, the two city folk in a jungle environment manage to hook up by the end of the film, a predictable but truly frightful event. For Lauper, the film would be her big screen debut, and for director
Ken Kwapis, Vibes followed his own debut with the
Sesame Street film
Follow That Bird in
1985. Needless to say, the recipe was perfect for disaster. The summer
1988 release floundered and has long since been forgotten, with Lauper's career stalling and Kwapis sent back to the dark corners of television directing. The only notable aspect of the film that remains is the score by then upstart composer James Horner.
Already nominated for
Academy Awards for his work on
An American Tail and
Aliens, the composer had completed work on the most lengthy and ambitious score of his career,
Willow (an enduring orchestral classic), the same year. The era of electronically ambient Horner music was waning.
For Horner collectors, 1988 marked the trailing years of the composer's heavy reliance on synthesizers as the sole instrumental spectrum on his lesser scores; many of his lower-budget efforts in the years to come would feature at least some moderately-sized orchestra.
Even though it is based seemingly entirely in the electronic realm, Vibes does have more character than Horner's more drab synthetic efforts of the era, such as
The Name of the Rose. While it was reported at the time that Horner employed a traditional string and brass section for some of the more supernaturally scary cues, it's difficult to hear their presence in the final work. What does stand out from the synthetics are the use of a few select woodwinds, including a pan flute and
Japanese sakauhachi flute (largely introduced in Horner's music that year). A significant array of percussive sounds, some strikingly electronic and some rattling with a little more authenticity, brings a vivid soundscape to the score during its jungle sequences. These elements are all placed over a rhythmic and early loop-based structure, often utilizing lengthy, repetitious, non-thematic performances to carry a score heavy on ambience and short on character theme or romance. That said, Horner's Vibes does shine at its best when his thematic material for the score is carried by the flutes. Over the banjos, guitars, clapping sounds, whimsical high range woodwinds, wood blocks, bird calls, mid-range drums, and a vast collection of rapping and tapping instruments, these flutes perform hopelessly chipper themes.
Overall, Vibes remains decades later as one of James Horner's more bizarre works, exhibiting very few of the usual commonalities that typically connect his other scores. Along those same lines, Vibes is also a score that fans of the composer can use very effectively in combating arguments about the composer's relative lack of originality.
Nothing in the world of modern film scores sounds remotely like Vibes (though
Thomas Newman might be the type to try), and Horner collectors specifically will be startled by the stark differences between this and the concurrently scored Willow.
Standing as the fourth entry in the
Varèse Sarabande label's first set of
Club releases around
1990, the pressing of Vibes was limited to an astonishingly low 1,
000 copies. That low pressing number was even surprising at
the time, given that Horner had just stunned audiences with
Glory and was sailing to the forefront of the industry. The
album sold out, as expected, and has sold for as much as $400 on the secondary market even after the profileration of the score in bootleg form, which features only the identical musical content and, usually, the same copied packaging as well.
(
http://www.filmtracks.com/titles/vibes
.html)