It appears that Friedkin was a big fan of the album "Points On The Curve," with the song "Wait" being a particular favourite. It's unclear whether Friedkin knew that band member Jack Hues was classically trained before approaching them to score the film, or if he simply trusted that they would be up to the task. Either way the band accepted the challenge and they wrote and recorded the music in just two weeks.
The album presented here features songs used in the film on the first side and instrumental pieces on the second. The music is not written for orchestra but realised on contemporary instruments such as the Fairlight CMI, PPG wave and EMU Emulator II. Whilst there is a smattering of very eighties sounding guitar and some nice bass from Nick Feldman, this is a distinctly electronic score.
The title track is a clever song that shies away from the band's usual shiny pop sound and delivers something slightly more disturbing. Unusually the chorus descends in pitch which gives a highly atmospheric and introspective feeling. I'm not a big fan of the second track "Lullaby" as it sounds a little kitsch for my ears but "Wake Up, Stop Dreaming" supplies an overdose of Emulator shakuhachi samples before morphing into a pop song that matches the style of the title track. For whatever reason William Friedkin insisted on using the track "Wait" from their previous album on the film so it is reprised her too.
Amongst the instrumental pieces there is a distinctive track called "Black—Blue—White" which sounds uncannily like Front 242. It is interesting to note that the Belgian EDM pioneers have a similar track called "Black White Blue" and I find it hard to believe that there wasn't some 'cross pollination' going on as Jack and Nick scrambled to generate ideas for the soundtrack.
There's also evidence of corners being cut with the nine minute opus "City of the Angels" which, as good as it is, simply amounts to an extended deconstruction of the track "Wait". Throughout these tracks you can hear distinctive PPG Wave choirs, Emulator strings and drums from the LinnDrum and its older brother the LM-1 - it's like an eighties synth spotting game.
The final track "Every Big City" has such a strong eighties sound it could be mistaken for a modern tribute used as library music on YouTube (I'm not sure of this is praise or condemnation). Still, this is a highly entertaining album and the combination of clever songs and dark eighties instrumentals wins me over. 3.5/5
