film score

Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire Full Score Analysis

It’s always a pleasure to hear a new film score, doubly so when I get the rare chance to absorb and reflect on a new Ghostbusters film score. With Ghostbusters: Afterlife, Rob Simonsen composed a lovely tribute both to Elmer Bernstein’s original 1984 score AND the film scores of the 80’s we’ve come to know by heart. With the latest installment, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire, composer Dario Marianelli takes themes from Elmer Bernstein, Rob Simonsen, and adds his own artist stamp to them. The result is a wonderful, big, sweeping score. With hints of the familiar and a lot of new music to pour over. There are a few new key themes that Marianelli has introduced, including a new romantic theme akin to Dana’s Theme from the original, and a new motif dedicated to the ancient Ghostbusters that have come before.

Marianelli’s score also holds the distinction of being the first Ghostbusters film that doesn’t contain a lot of needledrop, or popular music by other artists throughout. The original film obviously had a chart-topping soundtrack with all the artists Arista Records wanted to throw at the film. Ghostbusters II likewise with MCA. Answer the Call had a pretty rocking soundtrack, albeit so many variations and samplings of the Ray Parker Jr. theme song included, it may be what has given pause in the last two films from overusing the theme. Ghostbusters: Afterlife had several really great Americana cues and a full-volume featuring of the Buzzcocks’ Boredom. Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire features only two needledrop songs: “Love is Strange” by Mickey and Sylvia (which will be familiar to fans of the 80’s Dirty Dancing), and a brief instance of diegetic music heard at the beach through a sunbathers’ radio. So the score has to do all of the heavy lifting throughout the film.

As has become custom since the long-awaited release of Randy Edelman’s amazing Ghostbusters II score, GBHQ is going to attempt to breakdown each of the music cues that appear on the soundtrack, provide a little commentary, and get a better understanding of the new music that we’ve been gifted with. If you haven’t seen the film, spoilers are plenty in the text below since detailing action on-screen to mirror the score is necessary.

Got your copy queued up and ready? Let’s go!

Manhattan Adventurers Society

Where Ghostbusters: Afterlife’s score had a lot of heavy-lifting to set the mood through a variety of studio vanity cards, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire’s first music cue begins right as we see the Ghost Corps logo. The Yamaha DX-7, played by Peter Bernstein is front and center as that familiar synth chime kicks things off. While I wish the chime could have hit on that Columbia Pictures logo, since the studio is celebrating its 100th anniversary, they get a big and sweeping card with their theme. Which is fitting, and it’s great that Ghostbusters gets to be a part of this big studio celebration. Maybe from this point forward, the Yamaha chime becomes synonmous with the Ghost Corps logo? That would be fitting.

Some dark and ominous tones replicate the same draw that pulls you into the world of the film that Rob Simonsen created for Afterlife, but this go-round the Yamaha takes a little chime walk as we see the Ghostbusters firehouse. But wait, something is different. A lower third informs us this is the firehouse in 1907 as a steam bellowing horse drawn fire wagon bursts out the firehouse doors. This flashback sequence is fantastic and a welcome addition to Ghostbusters - our first period look to the past in the series. Marianelli’s score keeps tempo with a ticking clock sense of urgency as we follow the firefighters to a call. Dark bass-heavy piano and a large orchestra hit jar us from the spooky — there’s a little bit of a music edit here specific to the soundtrack that skips over the entirety of silence where the firefighters discover the frozen adventurers and straight to our look inside the orb at Garraka’s glowing, ominous eyes opening and then we’re into Ray Parker Jr.’s iconic them— wait a second…

Here we get to a moment that I’m sure will be widely debated and I was, frankly pretty surprised by: rather than the cold opening leading into a refrain from Ray Parker Jr.’s needle drop, Kenan and Marianelli have instead chosen to play a minor chord sting from the bouncy Ghostbusters rag theme over the materializing no-ghost logo and title. Timing-wise, I have a feeling it could have gone either way, and perhaps there even was an alternate edit at some point in post production where that RPJ song kicked into high gear over the logo just like the first two films. But here is something cool and unique.

Personal preference, I think the pop tune kicking into gear would have juxtaposed and really built energy into the Ecto-1 tearing through rush hour traffic in the next few shots. But what I think happened here was, Ghostbusters: Afterlife had a solemn challenge of putting a title card after the on-screen death of a character. If that character would have been a no-name victim of a ghost encounter, the energy is different and perhaps the Parker Jr. theme would have worked going from the attack into a title card. But this was the death of Egon Spengler and, sadly for the real world, seeing how Harold Ramis would be written out of the series. The theme song wouldn’t have been appropriate. Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire has the luxury of that aforementioned setup, but also chose not to give the movie theaters’ sound system a booming treat with the theme song and found a middle ground between what happened in Afterlife and what happened in the original two films. I’m guessing that, as the film is a passing of the torch, so too are we thematically passing the torch here too. The theme was for the OG’s in the 1980’s. The new crew either hasn’t earned that theme yet, or they’re forging their own territory where the bouncy Ghostbusters rag composed by Elmer Bernstein is their Hail to the Chief.

How do you feel about it? Let’s hear in the comments.

The Sewer Dragon

Arguably one of the best action sequences in the film, and possibly topping the Muncher chase in Afterlife as my favorite in-motion Ghostbusting scene, the Spengler Family chases the serpentine New Jersey Sewer Dragon through the busy streets as the aging Ecto-1 provides a few additional challenges for the team. A pulsating action cue with some sweeping orchestral lifts keeps the energy high at the top of the cue along with a few Mickey Mouse-d “uh oh” moments as obstacles are encountered. A military march of the Ghostbusters rag confidently tells us that this isn’t the Spenglers’ first rodeo, and they’re in charge, despite how things may look on screen.

At about the 2:40 mark, Marianelli starts to show us how his score might be a little different from his predecessors: a very Gothic and cathedral sounding rise of organ and percussion makes everything sound big. An almost Phantom of the Opera or more even Danny Elfman-esque moment that musically sets this score apart. Randy Edelman had a similar instinct in the Ghostbusters II score, to include these large organ and choir moments and it’s fun to hear Marianelli venture into similar territory as it really fits the world of Ghostbusters well.

FIREHOUSE

I’ve heard both Jason Reitman and Gil Kenan on a couple occasions refer to the family living in the firehouse in Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire as being akin to The Royal Tenenbaums: a family living on top of one another in a place that shouldn’t be housing a family of four. This wonderful cue accompanies a shot that would make Wes Anderson proud, moving from window to window to show the residents interacting with one another. Curiously, there’s a heroic establishing shot of the Hook and Ladder No. 8 that pulls us out of the Mayor Peck scene and a sweeping music sting that isn’t present here on the soundtrack. This one’ll take some future viewings and listenings to determine, but I’m wondering if it’s a music edit from a piece in the score elsewhere.

Ray’s Occult

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

A Ghost in the Attic

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Chess in the Park

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

When the Light is Green

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Paranormal Research Center

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

A Call

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

The Orb

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

A Tour of the Firehouse

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Slimer

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Dadi’s Secret Room

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Should We Investigate?

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Dr. Wartzki

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Patience

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Golden Years

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

It’s Your Turn

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Ionic Separator

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Now He Can Control You

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

The Horns

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Back to Headquarters

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

New Proton Packs

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Possessor’s Mistakes

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Was Any of it Real?

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

Last Frozen Stand

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

The Thawing

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

In the Fabric of the Universe

(Write-up coming soon, keep checking back!)

This analysis will continually be updated until we’re finished. Keep checking back for new updates!

Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire Soundtrack Coming to Digital and CD

Sony Masterworks will be releasing composer Dario Marianelli’s new score for Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire on digital platforms March 22nd, and later on CD April 2nd. No word on a vinyl release, but keep in mind that Ghostbusters: Afterlife’s score was released on vinyl in very small quantities through Movies on Vinyl, there’s a good chance any album release of that nature might be the same.

A track listing is available out there, but we’ll withhold from posting here in fear of any spoilers that might be hiding. As always, plan on a lengthy score analysis here on GBHQ at some point in the future.

GBHQ and the Crossrip podcast will have a fun giveaway to celebrate the release thanks to our friends at Sony Masterworks, stay tuned for more details!

Ghostbusters Afterlife Score Album Notes and Analysis

An article that I had a whole lot of fun writing recently was an analysis of Randy Edelman’s Ghostbusters II album release. Not only did it afford me an opportunity to sit with the headphones and really concentrate on the music, but it really made me appreciate just how Edelman’s choices affected the film-going experience. And, particularly on that film, it was the first opportunity that I’d had to listen to the film’s score clean and uninterrupted. I thought, in celebration of Rob Simonsen’s fantastic score for Ghostbusters: Afterlife landing on LP, I’d do a similar deep dive on my observations track-by-track. Though the score has been on regular play rotation for me, particularly with the vinyl arriving from Music on Vinyl, it’s basically been on a loop for the last several days while I work and I’ve really started to notice all the tiny details throughout.

First and foremost, before I jump in, I believe it’s a mistake to dismiss the Afterlife score as simply derivative or completely duplicating Elmer Bernstein’s original 1984 compositions. A film journalist whom I respect and admire greatly told me that hearing echoes of identifiable music from the original film took her out of the experience and instead distracted her, evoking imagery and emotion from the 1984 film and not the story playing out in front of her on-screen. While I understand that, it’s also tough to hold musical familiarity against this score because it is so precisely trying to mimic the films of the 1980’s - heavily influenced by John Williams’ use of recurring motifs and accompanying character and situational themes. I don’t think it’s fair to make claims that Simonsen is “just copying Elmer Bernstein” because the true fact is that he’s paying homage to Bernstein’s themes, while also simultaneously nodding to the great maestros like John Williams, Alan Silvestri, Jerry Goldsmith, and more. It would be like saying Elmer Bernstein was “just copying” Bernard Herrmann because he utilized techniques and motifs from the Psycho score to punctuate Dana Barrett being attacked by an arm chair.

Both Simonsen and Director Jason Reitman latched onto themes in the original film that go hand-in-hand with feelings, movements, and tension in the same way that Yoda’s Theme and the Force theme accompany some of the greatest moments in Star Wars.

As with Edelman’s 1989 score for Ghostbusters II, Rob Simonsen has also introduced new themes and melodies of his own that are unique and special to Afterlife specifically. And, while instantly recognizable themes like the bouncy “Ghostbusters Hero Rag,” and ominous marching “Zuul Theme” are present and used to great effect, particularly on comedic moments between Phoebe and Podcast, there are also some wonderful new things in this score. There’s something that I call the “Mystery Theme” which weaves in and out of Phoebe’s discoveries at the Dirt Farmhouse (and even punctuates the final end tag scene of the Containment Unit in the credits). There’s a whimsical and energetic “Kids’ Theme.” The town of Summerville gets an upbeat and brassy, almost Old Western sounding theme. And then later on the album, Callie gets her own heroic theme that blows me away. More on that in a bit.

Sadly, with the LP release of the score, several cues have been omitted from the digital and CD release. I’ll be doing an analysis of everything released to date, but will note those that are absent on the vinyl album.

Just like the Ghostbusters II score analysis, I’ll continue updating this entry as I notice and decipher things. So make sure to check back for updates after a few more sittings down the road. Ready? Here we go.

Trapped

Much as Bernstein’s 1984 score hit audiences right from the Columbia logo with that great synth note, Simonsen plays off the Sony Pictures “Chime” on its logo to immediately play into a piano waggle that became Peter Venkman’s unofficial theme in the original 1984 film. The film score is tasked with a lot of heavy lifting as it acts as the audience’s first impression of the film. What are we in for? What will this film do tonally? Luckily, there’s some time and the score takes advantage of several production company and studio logos to act as an overture rise leading to the opening images of the Shandor Mine. Like descending into a cavernous room in a haunted house, the score really makes a meal out of the space at the head of the film. Afterlife does an incredible job doing exactly what the original film did, literally hitting a note of music that takes us into an odd world of the paranormal and really showcases the unique Ondes Martenot, recorded by Cynthia Millar in a special recording session in London. Millar being the original artist who played the Martenot on Elmer Bernstein’s score.

After the mood is adequately built over a lengthy minute or so, a bold and brassy and almost heroic refrain of the “Zuul Theme” pulls us out of the moody mist and into the action as Egon Spengler initiates his plan at the Shandor Mine. This is the first instance in which Simonsen has taken a familiar theme and adapted it into the film to serve a new purpose, this heroic three-note melody makes multiple appearances throughout the score - acting as a musical lift very similar to that of Alan SIlvestri’s incredible Back to the Future score (more on that later) would punctuate acts of heroism and defying the odds. Speaking of SIlvestri’s Back to the Future score, at about 1:25 of the track, Simonsen utilizes a very Silvestriesque transition into a ticking clock theme that’s very reminiscent of Back to the Future’s climatic clocktower sequence score. Though modern films rely on flashy non-linear music video style editing to help build suspense and tension and make moments feel as if they’re happening in a micro-second, it was a common trend in the 80’s to also implement a literal pulsing ticking clock score to subconsciously get audiences’ hearts beating in rhythm. This is a wonderful trick that Simonsen uses throughout Afterlife that adds to and enhances just how much Afterlife feels like a throwback to the classics.

A percussive and strong refrain of the Ghostbusters Hero Theme hits at about 1:35, another adaptation. These aren’t the same happy-go-lucky Ghostbusters we remember from the 80’s. They’re battle-tested. They’re heroes. They’re courageous. And this modification of the theme in this moment, accompanied by some stunt-driver worthy maneuvers by a silhouetted Egon Spengler really hammers this home. Though we don’t see his face, we know that’s a Ghostbuster behind the wheel thanks to this theme. And thanks to it intercutting with an ominous Zuul theme, the chase is afoot.

Spengler’s truck crashes and the music takes a soft moment to catch its breath. In the process, it introduces the low clarinet “Mystery Theme” as the Farmhouse is seen for the first time. The Mystery Theme is a short and curious melody that’s used quite a bit in the first two acts of the film. But before we’re really able to register it here, we’re back in the action as Spengler charges the lines of his neutrona field and readies to slam the pedal to entrap the entity chasing him. A long rise with some Mickey Moused footsteps on brass and piano grow louder and louder until the device fails and Egon is forced to scramble. A less confident Ghostbusters Hero Theme with some quick string plucks follow Egon as he improvises and grabs a PKE Meter and the fog builds around him.

A brassy rendition of the Mystery Theme transitions into a low fog horn-like mood shift that becomes a moment straight from the original film as Dana Barrett was taken from her apartment by Zuul and dragged across the floor in an arm chair. The same violent surprise Dana received is musically recreated here as Egon gets the same shock and is attacked from all sides.

A slow resolve after the attack musically helps the audience realize that Egon has passed, but his spirit remains in the Farmhouse while a soft and solemn rendition of the Ghostbusters Hero Theme concludes and resolves into the film’s title card. What a wonderful sequence cinematically and musically.

Dirt Farm

The film goes for a long stretch without score as the Spengler family is evicted, travels from Chicago to Oklahoma and arrives in Summerville. Simonsen’s work resumes as the family station wagon pulls up the unpaved driveway and past ominous and prophetic signs warning of the apocalypse to come. This track places the new Mystery Theme front and center stage as the family discovers the Farmhouse for the first time. High and rolling woodwinds provide a creepy fanfare with some strings and a very quick and very low brass refrain of the Ghostbusters Hero Theme. The mystery is overpowering and overshadowing everything here and the heroic Ghostbuster theme is literally buried underneath it, waiting to be discovered. Incredibly clever touches musically in the first minute or so of the track.

At about 1:30, the tone of the mystery shifts into a low almost bassoon noodle. This small phrase here is also used at the very end of the film to punctuate a very mysterious (and very dusty) Ecto-Containment Unit in the basement of the firehouse.

The track ends with a very lovely and almost romantic theme that longtime fans will recognize as that heard in the Sedgewick Hotel as the Ghostbusters split up looking for Slimer. I’ve come to call this the “Investigative Theme” as in the original film it accompanied the team tracking down an unknown entity, and here it accompanies the family picking at the strangeness of their estranged father/grandfather’s odd home. An optimistic rise of the Ghostbusters Hero Theme announces the presence of Janine Melnitz at the door as the track concludes.

Chess

Full and perfect bouncy Ghostbusters Hero Theme at the start of the track with an interjection of the familiar two-tone Martenot theme that accompanies strange and sometimes gross imagery on-screen (think when Venkman is asked to get a sample of Ectoplasm falling from the New York Public Library Card Catalog). As Phoebe is intrigued by the invitation for a game of chess and notices the PKE Meter chirp, the score also strikes a curious tone with a sweeping rendition of the Mystery Theme.

Summerville

Welcome to the frontier. The Summerville track has a bold and brassy introduction full of energy and of life. This track seems very inspired by Jerry Goldsmith’s themes for Kingston Falls in Gremlins with dashes of Elmer Bernstein’s most notable western scores like Magnificent Seven. In fact, when I first heard the track I couldn’t help but visualize a sweeping crane shot rising over a train station and revealing the bustling city center of Summerville. This energy and life makes the town feel big, even though it is deceptively small and sparse as result of a mine that’s long since closed up. It’s an optimistic and exciting track of music that plays wonderfully into Phoebe approaching summer school with promise of making new friends (out of what?).

It also provides a stark contrast to just how cataclysmic the music gets by the third act of the film. When Summerville is descending into a nightmare hellscape and the town’s residents are being overrun with ghosts. Keen ears will note this was something Elmer Bernstein carefully did with the original film score as well. By the third act, the score was big, bombastic, and felt like the heavy footfalls of the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man crashing its way through Columbus Circle. This bright and vibrant track helps balance out the creepy mystery of the farmhouse with some life, some energy, and a lot of light just waiting to be thrust into darkness.

Research (*not on LP)

They called it the Shandorian curse. As Podcast gives Phoebe a history lesson on the Shandor Mines and their dark history, a very ominous, almost solemn, cello leads into a quick refrain of the Zuul/Gozer theme along with what I’ve come to call the Cataclysm melody. This is a quick but foreboding six-note melody that is ever-present on Elmer Bernstein’s rooftop sequence from the original film and makes several memorable appearances here in Simonsen’s score as well. The Cataclysm theme is subdued, almost muted. The danger is there, lurking in the shadows. A great contrast to later in the film when this six-note theme thunderously booms accompanying a giant vortex swirling around the Spengler family farm. The track ends with a lovely segue into the mystery theme suggesting the mine and the farm are interconnected in some way that Phoebe has yet to realize.

Under The Floor (*not on LP)

The mysterious presence of ghosts is easily communicated in film language without special effects in Ghostbusters. All you need is a slight wisp of wind in the actors’ hair, and a little bit of Ondes Martenot. An etherial Mertenot solo suggests that Phoebe isn’t alone as an unseen figure leads her to a puzzle in the floorboards of the farm house - the mystery puzzle of course is noted with a brief refrain of the Mystery theme as Phoebe unlocks the secrets within. Listen closely in the far background at the mid-way point of the track for a low brassy interlude of the bouncy Ghostbusters Hero Theme that almost sounds like it’s buried under the floor of the house as well. The energy builds as Phoebe continues being led to a destination with a Mickey Moused screech as the armchair animates and jars Phoebe into position. The brassy Ghostbusters Hero Theme comes to the surface now and the warmth of the whole orchestra gives the audience a certain level of comfort that this unorthodox exchange between Phoebe and her unseen grandfather has led her to a stunning realization: a Ghost Trap within a puzzle box. The full warmth of the orchestra continues with a concluding rendition of the Hero Theme. The past is no longer buried.

Nice Replica (*not on LP)

A perfectly plucky piano solo of the secondary Ghostbusters Hero Theme with an infectious charm and youthfulness that perfectly encapsulates Paul Rudd’s performance of Gruberson seeing a “replica” of a Ghost Trap. Bernstein realized that this piano melody conveyed the Ghostbusters’ (particularly Peter’s) energy in the original film and this theme on the piano accompanied memorable moments like the “No Kiss” scene in Dana’s Apartment. This theme has always musically captured for me what makes Ghostbusters so charming: despite the snark, rough around the edges, cigarette dangling from the lips, destroying private property with a nuclear accelerator edge of the Ghostbusters the music betrays that they’re really just kids at heart. Try this as an experiment: listen to Nice Replica when you’re out for a walk or in an elevator and see what it does to your mood and how it makes you feel. If a stranger approached you on the walk or entered the elevator, and this melody accompanied the soundtrack to your life, how would it change your demeanor.

Culpable (*not on LP)

That building “walking” theme starts out the track with a quick piano refrain of what is often used as Venkman’s theme occurring at :10 into the track. As Gruberson and the kids rig the Ghost Trap to a school bus alternator for a little power and end up unleashing hell, a full bombastic orchestra version of the Zuul/Gozer theme accompanies. After a brief valley for us and the characters on-screen to recover from the scare, the Ghostbusters Hero Theme slowly builds as a tension release. Though the explosion of the trap scared the hell out of them and us, this experiment showed the equipment was real, it still functioned, and maybe they released something they weren’t supposed to in the process.

Laboratory (*not on LP)

The Mystery Theme is on full display in Laboratory. The twists and turns of the theme starting out the track front and center. Again the motif of a subdued and almost buried Ghostbusters Hero Theme played on a low brass punctuates Phoebe’s exploration of a secret laboratory hidden underneath the farmhouse. At around the :56 mark, a low and ominous refrain from the Zuul/Gozer theme both punctuates Egon’s ultimate plan and perhaps his demise. The Mystery Theme segues back into the spotlight and a warm, friendly almost resolving rendition of the Ghostbusters Hero Theme hits at the midway point as Phoebe discovers a rack of jumpsuits hanging in the closet (and a discarded Crunch bar wrapper to boot). Despite the ominous tones of the Zuul theme, Phoebe gets a chance to breathe as do we as on-screen we receive confirmation that her grandfather was Egon Spengler. The Mystery Theme continues with a bit more purpose as Egon shows Phoebe how to complete the prototype Proton Pack he’d been developing at the time of his death.

At about 2:38, something wonderful happens that rarely occurs throughout the score, this is the first instance of a synthesizer really playing in Afterlife as a distant almost echoing synth ticking clock can be heard for a brief moment leading into a highlight of Ondes Martenot. That synth/Martenot combination was a staple of the original 1984 score and plays so well here. The combination of technology and the unknown interplaying just as they do in the film itself.

Lab Partners

This track was among the first released and previewed before Ghostbusters: Afterlife was released in theaters and for good reason, it’s a fully focused and bouncy rendition of the Ghostbusters Hero Theme in all its glory, upright piano with the woodwinds and horns having a ball. From the perspective of the album experience, having this full heroic rendition of the main theme play shortly after Phoebe’s discovery is a wonderful segue in the the second and third acts of the film as portrayed here on the score release. But of note, this is the score cue that primarily accompanies Podcast walking Phoebe through Summervile and asking her to tell a joke. I’d be curious if bits of this track were sliced off and edited into that sequence but may have actually been written to accompany a deleted scene in which Phoebe tests out the new Proton Pack in a corn field and ends up creating the popcorn she’s eating while watching the OGB’s television commercial on her laptop.

Definitely Class Five (*Not on LP)

The first of three tracks that are dedicated to the Muncher chase, which is one of the biggest centerpieces of the Afterlife film. The track begins with a marching purposeful melody (which gets a reprise later in the film in one of my favorite sequences where the kids suit up as Ghostbusters and infiltrate the Summerville PD to retrieve the Ecto-1 and the Spengler Pack). At around the :37 mark, the track has another wonderful homage to the Alan Silvestri scores of the 1980’s: an almost militaristic “dun-dun” that sounds similar to a recurring bit Silvestri used in the Clocktower sequence of the original Back to the Future. Again, as mentioned earlier, it should be noted that Simonsen’s Ghostbusters: Afterlife score is as much of a love letter to the original Ghostbusters as it is to the most memorable scores from the 80’s. Keep that in mind when listening to these three tracks and how much you notice they evoke similar feelings to watching your favorite pop culture films from the era.

A sweeping and brassy rendition of the Ghostbusters Hero Theme plays to the nosebleeds at close to the minute mark a moment accompanying the Ecto-1 in a grand wide shot heading into town. The creep factor kicks into overdrive as the new Ghostbusters discover Muncher on a street corner and a stare-down ensues. The track immediately segues into:

Go Go Go (*Not on LP)

Oddly this is the track that I’ve had the most discussion with a couple colleagues who point to “musical moments I remember from the original movie taking me out of the film.” Because the start of this track is so front and center and really kicks off the chase sequence, it really gives the score a chance to shine but many including my colleague associate this specific piece of music with Louis Tully being pursued by a horrifying Vinz Clortho through Central Park. Admittedly, it’s tough not to hear this piece of music and hear Rick Moranis’ voice yelling, “Help, there’s a bear in my apartment!” — but I didn’t bump on this as much as others may have. After all a “chase sequence” in Ghostbusters this is. As was the moment in which a Terror Dog is bounding across the street after our favorite accountant.

However, I also have a feeling that this might be one of the few tracks that Jason Reitman and Rob Simonsen mentioned they returned to some of the original recordings for the 1984 film to capture some of those performances. Particularly around the :19 mark of this quick track, the strings either sound like the musicians in the new scoring session were spot-on with their performance and mic placement to replicate the 1984 recording, or in fact that might be the 1984 strings playing. So perhaps subconsciously, because this music is so familiar to our ear and brain, and because it’s engrained with a moment in time from the original film we associate the music with so clearly, our own brains are playing tricks on us.

Regardless of that, it’s tough not to hear this cue nor watch the film with this cue playing at full volume and not feeling as if it’s spot-on Ghostbusters. It’s hard to mistake that, no matter how many tricks our curious brains wish to play on us.

Trap Him

A rolling screech (literally accompanying the Ecto-1 tearing around a corner with Phoebe hanging out the side) leads to a rousing brass fanfare for the Ghostbusters Hero Theme moves us into the next phase of the Muncher chase sequence as the Ecto-1 closes in on the blue entity. The track segues into a march again, sounding very Alan Silvestri as the tension builds. At about the 1:12 mark, Simonsen does something interesting with the Zuul theme - giving us a quick refrain of it in a brassy major chord. Where the theme is usually utilized for ominous Mickey Mousing of evil afoot, here it’s used triumphantly. As if Zuul’s evil is about to be overcome as Phoebe shouts to Podcast to, “Trap him already!” Unfortunately, it doesn’t go as planned and Phoebe breaks her proton stream through the bed of a pickup truck and half of Spinners’ neon sign.

The film takes a quick breath here for a bit of diegetic music with Willie Nelson’s “On the Road Again” heard by the patrons of Spinners. But the album track keeps right on rolling picking up in the same spot as the tires of the Ecto screech to a sliding stop. A quiet and sweet flute solo gives us the Kids’ Theme as they collect themselves physically and mentally. Muncher heads to the mountain and the track really builds the suspense of will they/won’t they trap Muncher before a bridge closes in on them.

Great tension music comes to a crescendo that ultimately is punctuated with a reimagining of Elmer Bernstein’s “trap sequence” cue heard in the Ballroom of the Sedgewick Hotel that then exudes the musical equivalent of a jump for joy (which the RTV Trap demonstrates on-screen). A brief pause into resolve as the heroes celebrate their victory and are able to take a few deep breaths along with the audience. But at the 3:30 mark, the heroes realize Muncher was trying to escape to the mine and perhaps it’s a sign. A synthesized let down harkening back to a tension release as Dana Barrett floats four-feet above her covers takes the edge off the excitement and returns us to the real stakes in the film’s progression.

It’s with this that Rob Simonsen’s ode to lengthy 1980’s John Williams-era set-piece scoring comes to a conclusion. To me, this ranks right up there with the Star Wars assault on the Death Star in terms of the music really lending a hand to telling a beginning, middle and end of a sequence within the film.

Don’t Go Chasing Ghosts (*Not on LP)

A short piece of beautiful music that accompanies Phoebe realizing that she needs to use her one incarcerated phone call to dial the phone number in the old Ghostbusters advert, Simonsen does something incredible at about the one-minute mark of the track: he takes the bouncy Ghostbusters Hero Theme and turns it into a warm, nostalgic, even maybe a little tired and removed rendition of the theme. Ray Stantz has shielded himself, chosen to bury himself in his work at Ray’s Occult rather than relive the past. The score completely mirrors this while also warming the audience to seeing Aykroyd’s iconic character on-screen for the first time in thirty-plus years.

Ultimately the dialogue scene between Ray and Phoebe is so poetic and bittersweet, that we could hear a pin drop in between their dialogue and Simonsen’s score keeps it just as quiet. Choosing to help entwine their conversation with brief and emotional musical interludes.

Once again, this is a great track to point toward in demonstrating how Simonsen has not only adapted the original themes but is using them to great effect in conveying emotion and tone with perfection. I love it.

Mini-Pufts

The sliding and whimsical “Ectoplasm Theme” and a heavy dose of synthesizer kicks off this cue as an etherial entity makes its way past the Wal-Mart greeter and into the local Summerville department store. Gruberson spies something shake on the Wal-Mart shelf. A tension building music cue betrays the cuteness that arrives on-screen with the first Mini-Puft, who rubs the sleep out of its eyes and toddles toward Gruberson enthusiastically. A dreamy lullaby of synth accompanies the Mini-Puft awakening. The cue takes a hard turn, as does the adorable moment when Gruberson gets nipped on the finger and chaos ensues. Synth builds to a bouncing and chaotic cross between Looney Tunes Merry Melodies score and Jerry Goldsmith’s now iconic Gremlins rag. In fact, just before the two-minute mark of the cue, the synth plucks a couple chords extremely evocative of Goldsmith’s six-note Gremlins theme. Energy builds as the number of Mini-Pufts multiplies, as does the damage and destruction they cause.

A new Mini-Puft theme begins around 2:20. It’s a cute and mischievous melody that also continues to incorporate the two-note Ectoplasm Theme.

Watching the world burn comes to a jarring and complete stop as Gruberson turns a corner to find Vinz Clortho snacking on a giant bag of dog food fit for Cousin Eddie to throw in Clark’s cart. Gone is the cuteness and mischief as the chase is on and Gruberson bolts. As Gruberson runs for the doors and Vinz follows in hot pursuit, the Zuul Theme kicks into high gear.

It was an interesting, and perhaps deliberate decision not to utilize the same musical chase cue that followed Louis Tully’s pursuit in this moment (and was also used earlier in the film at the start of the Muncher chase sequence). I can only surmise that, since the events unfolding on-screen are so familiar and echo things of the past, that maybe dropping that cue here felt too on the nose. Regardless, the stark contrast between the Vinz/Gruberson chase and the whimsical Puft themes that start the cue make this a fun and interesting track. Keen ears will also remember this is the first bit of score that fans heard from the film, as it was used to score Jenn Fujikawa’s fun DIY videos that were created in promotion of the film.

Down the Well (*Not on LP)

Just as Elmer Bernstein’s original 1984 score gradually built from mysterious and bouncy to bombastic and catastrophic, the Afterlife score shifts after the Muncher bust. The stakes are higher and the music follows. As our heroes descend into the Shandor Mine, the score Mickey Mouses lowering into the darkness and utilizes the natural breathiness of the Ondes Martenot to build the mood. The Gozer/Zuul theme slowly creeps into the mystery around the two-minute mark as evidence of Shandor’s grand plot is uncovered. Phoebe puts the puzzle together, discovering that her grandfather Egon Spengler had been holding the line, literally guarding the portal to prevent another crossrip. As the PKE surges and builds, the music rises at about 3:25. This is another of the few times that Simonsen utilizes a fairly modern trope of a doppler cinematic rise sound effect built into the score. Rises and bass drops became so common in trailers that they eventually worked their way into the actual sound design of films, and this isn’t uncommon. But more on Simonsen’s use of rises in a bit.

The Temple Resurrected (*Not on LP)

A fairly short track, the past repeats itself as Gozer reenters our dimension. This track pays homage to the rooftop sequence of the original Ghostbusters as Gruberson diverts the proton streams from crossing and allows the portal to open fully. As a possessed Callie jumps out the window and flees into the farm outside, listen very closely in the last few seconds. There’s a wonderful little nod to the sweet and “release of tension” melody that plays right after Dana Barrett floats four feet above her covers.

The Plan (*Not on LP)

Aside from the Muncher chase, “The Plan” is where Simonsen ventures the most into Alan Silvestri homage. Phoebe grabs a PKE Meter and heads outside, realizing that the entire farm has been constructed as a giant trap. She leads the team down the firepole and into the subterranean Spengler lab. As she does, Simonsen gives us a driving and purposeful version of the Kids’ theme along with some Silvestri (dare I say some Morricone) trademark whip cracks and a thumping bass line from a piano. It’s a lot of fun as the strings and percussion all hit in a syncopated, driving beat while Phoebe shows the team the model of the farmhouse. Yes, while Ghostbusters: Afterlife is evocative of the original Ghostbusters films, here it’s paying very loving tribute to Back to the Future and Doc Brown’s “not quite to scale” model of Clocktower Square. From about 2:10 to 2:30, the score on the album here deviates from the film a bit just before we see Callie and Gruberson unite “formally” at what appears to be Summerville’s version of the famous Vasquez Rocks from Star Trek. There are a few pick-up reshoots in this sequence (as evident by Phoebe and Podcast looking slightly older in a few shots), so it stands to reason there was some music editorial in the final version of the film necessary to work with the recut sequence.

Suit Up

Our heroes break into the Summerville police department to reclaim their ghost-catching gear and the driving Silvestri score continues. About twenty seconds into the track, Simonsen musically begins to marry the Kids theme and the Ghostbusters Hero theme. Listen closely as the energetic theme that’s accompanied the kids gets a couple quick stings of the Hero melody, first as a high toned refrain, then again with some brass and power, each time building in confidence. While Phoebe, Podcast, Trevor, and Lucky have all donned the flightsuits and are working to free the Ecto-1, they’re also musically acquiring the Ghostbusters’ hero theme. It’s a lovely build that of course crescendos with a throw back to the Ecto-1’s original firehouse reveal and the blaring of a familiar siren in the sound effects.

As the Ecto-1 speeds toward the Shandor Mine, we now get a quick, urgent, brassy, energetic and fully-merged version of the Ghostbusters Hero and Kids theme at 1:52 before an ominous and foreboding tone ends the track.

No, I’m Twelve

A dimensional gateway has opened and Gozer is here, ready to rule our mortal plane. The music gets big and operatic, but not before an eerie intro in this track with punctuated flute notes and a refrain harkening back to the very first mysterious piece of score we heard in 1984’s Ghostbusters as Alice the librarian walks through the stacks. New Vinz and New Zuul walk toward the temple steps. Interestingly, Simonsen opts to not use the four-note radio serial sounding “bum bum dum dummm!” The music explodes as the two raise their hands to the sky and other worldly lightning strikes them, opening the portal for Gozer while simultaneously turning the possessed humans into their Terror Dog form. The orchestra swells, the synth wails. Our new Ghostbusting heroes, who have been waiting in the shadows make their move.

Getaway

The climax of the film officially begins and Simonsen’s score does quite a bit of heavy lifting, bouncing between the sentimentality of the family story resolution and the climatic battle with Gozer. The track begins with a quiet moment. The new heroes’ plan is enacted as the gatekeeper is trapped by the RTV, Callie is loaded into the Ecto-1, and the game is afoot. A ticking clock chase ensues with a heroic and brassy rendition of the Ghostbusters Hero theme at a minute and a half dovetailing into the Mystery Theme as Callie is brought up to speed. The mystery is solved and this version of the theme has energy and strikes a major chord. But with Keymaster Vinz hot on their trail, a bouncy Terror Dog stomp breaks the mood and brings us back into the action. Simonsen is able to work in a quick refrain of the Kids’ theme at the end of the track for good measure, effectively giving us a wonderful overture of all the major themes of the score in one bite.

Callie (*Not on LP)

When I first picked up the album, I initially thought this might be a tangent in the action - possibly a concert version of Callie’s theme. Interestingly, this track is a bit out of chronological order in the album presentation. A sweet a melodic track that accompanies Callie venturing down into her father’s lab and realizing that in fact, he had been keeping track of her throughout the years.

Here’s why I think this track is presented here leading into the end of the film: at about 1:35 into the track a new melody is introduced. It’s a warm, tender, and very strings heavy motif that plays a huge part in the closing moments of the film. It’s just slightly off from the Mystery theme, almost a resolute version of it. As if the mystery is no longer veiled in shadow and out in the open. Let’s call this Callie’s Theme from here-on out. And it gets a wonderful spotlight just before a mist creeps into the underground room and possesses our hero.

Protecting the Farm

The Ecto-1 once again does an impression of the Griswold Family Truckster launching back to the Spengler Farm. Zuul’s crossrip theme is in full effect here at the top of the track before a soft moment of mystery. You can almost hear the trademark Ivan Reitman “gust of wind” in the breath the music takes before going into nearly five minutes non-stop.

Because this track is wall-to-wall, it also incorporates lots and lots of those trailer sounding rises. The score is subliminally putting us on edge, and assisting the sound design a few times here. Once at :53 for almost a full minute, then again later at 2:13, and 3:04, and a few teasing instances thereafter. If I had one critique of the score, it would be the overuse of the rises here to help accentuate the rising tension and the powering up of the farm’s “trap.” Amid such a beautiful homage to the thematic scores of the past, it’s such an overused modern trope. It certainly works, especially when mixed into the final soundstage of the film, but for me is one of the only things that bumps when I listen to the score on its own.

That aside, the record scratch on the operatic hits at 3:39 when three figures emerge from the distance to help save the day. As we hear familiar voices and see familiar faces of Venkman, Stantz, and Zeddemore a heroes fanfare gives way to a plucky and whimsical rendition of the Ghostbusters Hero Theme. Perfect for the ad-libbed Venkman dialogue it accompanies. But then it’s back down to business as the action resumes at 4:24 with purpose and intensity.

Showdown

A shot is fired to garner Gozer’s attention: it’s from young Phoebe with a determined look on her face. Phoebe digs in (literally and figuratively) and interestingly Callie’s Theme, introduced just a short while ago on the album, swells. Perhaps attributing some of Callie’s theme to her daughter here for a heroic moment. Despite her courage and strength, Phoebe seems outmatched and wavers. The music takes a breath.

At :41 the twist: after taking a brief respite, a lullaby rendition of the Ghostbusters Hero Theme. A tender and paternal musical moment as we see on-screen, a translucent hand cover and reenforce Phoebe’s…

…a full John Williams swell of the Ghostbusters Hero Theme as we’ve never heard it before signals the return of Dr. Egon Spengler, there to assist his granddaughter. The score continues with strength, pausing only for a moment for friends to reunite in the strangest of ways at 1:30. The trap is spring at 1:40 and the villainous Gozer is defeated with a triumphant flourish at the end of the track.

Reconciliation

And so, we come to the final track of the album. Which just happens to be my favorite as well. It’s an emotionally-charged track that tugs on the heartstrings for a variety of reasons. Not just because we’re seeing a character on-screen for the first time but also because our protagonists are also getting closure and a moment to say goodbye. A few highlights in this track:

:40 - as a warm, strings heavy rendition of the Ghostbusters Hero Theme swells, a piccolo quickly punctuates the Mystery Theme. The two are entwined now. The mystery is over.

2:05 - a perfect rendition of the Ghostbusters Hero Theme for a marshmallow fluff covered Podcast to meet his hero Ray Stantz. The plucky version of the theme is childlike and youthful and fits the two of these characters and their enthusiasm so well. And it seamlessly blends into:

2:45 - Callie’s Theme, with as much emotion and poignancy possible, which plays over Egon seeing his grandkids face to face and a wonderful and tender moment of a grandfather tucking a strand of hair behind Phoebe’s ear.

3:30 - A violin solo with a melody that is unique to this moment and this moment alone. Egon and Callie embrace in a hug as Trevor puts an arm over his sister's shoulder. Zeddemore, Stantz, and Venkman all watch with tears welling in their eyes. This sweeping orchestration immediately calls to mind John Williams’ “Saying Goodbye” from E.T. because of the lift that, combined with incredible performances, it provides for the film.

That lump in your throat that both the E.T. track and this new score from Simonsen produce is honestly what movies are all about. Being along on a ride with characters, empathizing with them to literally feel the emotion they feel. And the greatest film scores are such an intrinsic part of that emotional experience. Yes, we don’t necessarily equate a movie like Ghostbusters with sentiment and emotion, but the most memorable films from the 80’s all left lasting impressions and this is a love letter not just to the 1984 classic, but so many of the films responsible for our pop culture to date. It’s an emotional bookend to our childhoods. Just as the Spengler family has experienced a resolve and a new purpose, so too has this franchise and the films and stories that will continue. This is an emotional closure to chapter one. And a herald for a new chapter to begin.

At 3:55, the orchestra plays the Ghostbusters Hero Theme to the walls. The day is saved. A spirit can rest and cross over to the other side. And a definitive orchestral hit brings the score to an end.

What a treat this music is from start to finish.

Ghostbusters II Score Album Notes and Analysis

I love film scores. Nothing can evoke images and memories from your favorite films like sitting and listening to a well-crafted film score. Which is why it’s been such a treat to have in my hands the score to the 1989 film Ghostbusters II and to hear all the nuances and decisions made that aren’t necessarily audible in the film, nor the unofficial bootleg releases, we’ve all listened to repeatedly over the course of a few decades.

Randy Edelman’s Ghostbusters II score is often overlooked. Elmer Bernstein’s original film score usually commands the majority of the spotlight. But upon first listenings of this incredible remastered score, the themes that present themselves are very apparent. Peter has a recurring theme that gives him swagger and confidence. Dana has a lovely theme to counter that, which is thoughtful and measured, and quite a bit different than that which Bernstein presented in the first film that was far more romantic. There’s a Ghostbusters “hero theme” that’s present for when all four of them gather together. Oscar’s theme sounds like a very sweet and melodic variation on “Rockabye Baby.” There’s even a recurring love theme for sentimental moments between Peter and Dana. More on the themes and motifs here as they become clearer.

It’s also interesting that Edelman and Ivan Reitman were virtually inseparable for a ten year streak starting with Twins in 1988 and ending with Six Days Seven Nights in 1998. In fact, many of Reitman’s films during that period have the same look and feel and the score followed in step. Listening to the album, it’s hard not to also get a sense of Kindergarten Cop and other Reitman films that shared this same optimistic and whimsical sense of comedy. Where Reitman’s working relationship with Bernstein seemed to have soured after the original Ghostbusters, he continued to collaborate with Edelman following this film and far beyond. And, as Reitman’s choices in projects shifted into the 2000’s and beyond, his relationship with Edelman came to a close as well. It’s almost as if entire phases in Ivan Reitman’s career were also accompanied by the music of singular composers until recently, where one doesn’t get the sense he’s found his next match still.

The album is presented out of film sequence, with many tracks combined with other moments elsewhere in the film. I know this can be frustrating to some listeners. There are two schools of thought in film score releases: the completionism approach - where every note heard, or not heard, is present and accounted for. Then there’s the album listening experience, where the composer and producers have arranged the tracks to be a more complete and fulfilling experience from start to finish. Unfortunately, both parties always think the other is wrong. Honestly, I’m just glad to have clean and high fidelity versions of cues. I feel like the beggars can’t be choosers rule should probably be applied in this instance. If rearranging and compiling the music to be optimized for album play was a demand of Edelman or the music label, then it was worth it. Frankly, it’s a miracle this release has occurred. While it would be great to have a 100% complete copy of all score recorded for the film, even having this edition is a most-welcome addition to the collection.

As I listen to the score and hopefully get more insight via liner and production notes to come. I’ll be adding to this dossier of each of the tracks. Since so much of listening to film scores is hearing them over and over and becoming more familiar with them, it’s absolutely impossible to create a complete write up in just a few sittings.

So keep visiting for additional updates and thoughts as they come!

A Few Friends Save Manhattan

This definitely is a one-to-one lift of the end credits melody that closes out the final moments of the credits in the film. I’ve always adored this compilation which starts with Janine’s “You look fantastic in this” moves into the love theme and then into the scurried courtroom/Vigo battle chaos and introduces what I call the “hero theme” for the Ghostbusters as a whole. It comes to a satisfying crescendo meant to close out the credits, but in this instance almost feels like the ending of an overture leading us into the musical experience.

A Baby Carriage Meets Heavy Traffic

Being that the score is so heavily featured in the opening moments of the film, it’s great to hear the urgency and the tension as it was composed here, and how the sound design and effects also helped punctuate some of the musical choices made. I’d love to line this one up with the film to see if any music edits were made in the film that aren’t present here.

Venkman's 6th Ave. Strut

Composers love writing themes for Bill Murray. This jaunt is no exception. To my ear, this is one of the newly recorded tracks mentioned in the press release. It feels like a composed and orchestrated concert version of the Venkman theme that’s heard throughout the film, and highlights Randy Edelman’s incredible piano talents. Between Bernstein’s Bill Murray themes in Stripes and Ghostbusters, and this confident melody, I’m anxious and anticipate what Rob Simonsen may have also done for Afterlife.

Order in the Court

A short quote of the Ray Parker Jr. theme around 2:30 as the courtroom gets eerie and the Ghostbusters search for the Scoleri Brothers that isn’t heard in the final film’s mix. As well as a few instances of Oscar and Dana’s themes at the end of the track that sound to me like the “You’re short, your belly button sticks out, and you’re a terrible burden on your poor mother.”

He's Got Carpathian Eyes

Part of the end battle with Vigo is presented here, essentially the “giving you until the count of three” moment leading to Vigo’s horrible breath knocking our heroes to the ground. This cue seems to track exactly with how it is presented in the film.

The Sensitive Side of Dana

Another cue that sounds like it might have been intended as a concert version, particularly with a lovely string introduction that leads into the Dana theme heard throughout the film starting around the one minute mark. Particularly since this main theme is played on the piano, guessing that this was one of the newly recorded tracks as well. Dana’s theme in the second film sounds very nurturing and comforting, as if more a maternal motif is being presented to her. It’s an interesting contrast to Bernstein’s score which presented Dana as a romantic, but perhaps supernatural in nature character utilizing the ondes martenot to give her an otherworldly feel. Interestingly, that same dichotomy is reserved for Oscar, as we’ll hear in his concert arrangement later.

In Liberty's Shadow

Starts with the heroic and wonderful moment as the Ghostbusters approach the “giant Jell-O mold” of the museum and find that their proton beams are ineffective. This cue is such a rollercoaster of emotion from heroic, to failure, to inspiration, to a quote of almost patriotism as the heroes land on Liberty Island. I’m also excited to figure out just how many different themes we can now sense a repeated pattern of with this presentation.

Rooftop Broom Kidnap

I know that the title of this one trips many people up, is it possible that Janosz was going to appear on a broom stick rather than as a ghostly nanny at one point in the production? It is also one of the tracks on the album that has combined cues spotted from elsewhere in the film for this presentation. Guessing rather than separating out tracks that were short segments, some of the music was arranged for a more complete album listening experience. The last 15 to 20 seconds of the track is the lovely transition sting that leads from the “Face it, Ghostbusters doesn’t exist” conversation into Dana entering Egon’s lab, and is also used elsewhere in the film as a similar transition.

The Scoleri Brothers

The cue begins with Ray noticing the specimen container admitted as evidence “twitching” ultimately leading the explosive reveal of the Scoleris. Then switches to the percussive “teamwork” theme as a transition that crescendos into a full-blown phrase of Ray Parker Jr.’s theme played heroically on the horns. Was this intended to accompany the boys in grey throwing the packs on again for the first time in five years? I’ve also seen a few fellow fans mention this all seems to be score for the post slime swim moments where Ray, Egon and Winston interrupt Peter and Dana’s date in their long johns. Possible either way that the album producers felt this was a good segue from the frantic and intense courtroom battle into a soft and sweet concert piece for Oscar. EDIT: On further reflection, I think the synth leading into the full blown rendition of the Ray Parker Jr. theme is an alternate to the Ecto-1A conversation in front of the museum leading to “Suck in the guts, guys” pose. The timing seems to line up perfectly. Interesting that it was intended to hear the familiar Ghostbusters theme in this moment, but a more generic fanfare replaced it.

Oscar is Quietly Surrounded

This very tender and sweet cue feels like the third and final “newly recorded” concert piece for the album. The cue starts with a sleepy baby’s lullaby phrase of Oscar’s theme. As mentioned earlier, the similarities to the classic “Rockabye Baby” are immediately noticeable here. As more instruments introduce themselves, the piece grows - then takes a dark and ominous note, a looming shadow over Oscar. That see-saw back and forth between childhood and an almost Gothic evil continues throughout as elements from the film are incorporated to build out and fill the concert piece.

A Slime Darkened Doorway

Much like “Vigo’s Last Stand” this appears to be a compilation of the slime moments throughout the film. The cue starts with a mysterious note as the river of slime is building underground and Ray is dangled like a worm on a hook. Tension increases as the slime attacks and Ray causes a Manhattan blackout. The last forty seconds of the cue appear to be the fire erupting in the firehouse darkroom as Winston barges in to save the day.

One Leaky Sewer Faucet

This one is a fun enigma that I look forward to learning more about. Is this the cue that was recorded for the film and unused? Or can we hear bits and pieces of it somewhere and we’ve never realized? Further investigation is needed for this one. Some have suggested it could have been a score for use in the spot eventually occupied by Glen Frey’s Flip City. Which would track, a similar moment like this was scored for the first film and replaced by Magic, after all. Would need to line these up on an edit timeline to investigate further. Though it doesn’t feel quite long enough. It’s a whimsical almost Danny Elfman plucky sounding cue. Perhaps written for Louis’ Slimer experiences omitted from the film?

Vigo's Last Stand

While the title of the track points to the conclusion of the film, which is present at the top of the track here starting with the “Ray, could you move? We’d like to shoot the monster” moment, this actually acts as a compilation of Vigo moments and thematic phrases. Vigo’s Greatest Hits, if you will. At about a minute thirty, it sounds like the moment Venkman finds Oscar a shady spot combined with Egon’s “uh oh” as Vigo exits the painting. The last forty seconds ends on Venkman’s first visit to the museum and introduction to Janosz. A final spooky note when Dana tells Venkman she feels like the painting is watching her and Janosz believes his love is reciprocated closes out the track.

Good With Kids

This compilation of what I can only call the “three men and a baby theme” throughout the film. Starts with the “Not going to get a green card with that attitude pal,” and a phrase from Ray, Egon and Peter’s study of Oscar’s room and wanting to run gynecological tests.

Enlightenment

Janosz’s possession and the reveal that Vigo is commanding him. “Find me a child that I might live again” and lightning shooting into Janosz’s eyes close out this cue straight from the film.

Family Portrait-Finale

The first minute and thirty seconds of this cue as the “Fettuccini” painting is revealed are exactly from the film, but from that point forward a tender resolve feels written for a dialogue scene and conclusion that might have been left on the cutting room floor. Or, being that piano is heavily featured here, parts of this inclusion are newly recorded to being the album to a close where the familiar Ray Parker Jr. theme usually left us on a high note. Particularly the optimistic resolve into the “hero theme” which builds into the full orchestration reprise used in the end credits gives us a sense of the heroes riding off into the sunset as the album comes to a close.

Randy Edelman's Ghostbusters II Score Coming August (on Vinyl in October)

GBII Vinyl.jpg

For thirty-plus years, fans have wanted/requested/demanded an official release of Randy Edelman’s original film score for Ghostbusters II — and finally, after all that time it’s coming!

Hitting digital and CD in August, and vinyl in October, not only is this a remastered and official release of the film score for the first time, but it also includes a track unused in the film as well as THREE re-recorded tracks specifically for this release. What could those three tracks be, and why did they necessitate re-recording? Stay tuned, hopefully the liner notes of the release will tell all!

While we wait, Sony Masterworks and Randy Edelman himself have released “The Scoleri Brothers” as a tease on Apple Music, Spotify, Amazon, and other platforms, giving us our first clean listen to the score without music and effects married to it. Notable in the video is that the score includes familiar lines and melodies from Ray Parker Jr.’s theme that are not heard in the final mix of the film giving a hint that we may have heard reprises of the theme throughout the film at one point or another. It’s incredible!

Pre-orders are available up on Amazon, but it also stands to reason your local music stores will be able to order it if you want to support your small business shop!

Barnes and Noble also has an exclusive GLOW-IN-THE-DARK variant available for pre-order now:

Barnes and Noble Exclusive Glow-in-the-Dark Vinyl (Pictured)

Barnes and Noble Exclusive Glow-in-the-Dark Vinyl (Pictured)

Here’s the official solicits and news:

For the first time ever - 32 years after the film’s 1989 release - the Original Score to Ghostbusters II will be available across digital and physical formats from Sony Classical. The album includes original tracks as well as 3 newly re-recorded tracks and an additional track originally recorded for Ghostbusters II but not featured in the film.

Audio CD and Digital Platform Release: August 13, 2021

Vinyl Release: October 15, 2021
180 Gram, 1x LP

Track Listing:

A Few Friends Save Manhattan

A Baby Carriage Meets Heavy Traffic

Venkman's 6th Ave. Strut

Order in the Court

He's Got Carpathian Eyes

The Sensitive Side of Dana

In Liberty's Shadow

Rooftop Broom Kidnap

The Scoleri Brothers

Oscar is Quietly Surrounded

A Slime Darkened Doorway

One Leaky Sewer Faucet

Vigo's Last Stand

Good With Kids

Enlightenment

Family Portrait-Finale