Practice music review-Inception Film Soundtrack

Upon hearing the first track of the soundtrack to the biggest blockbuster of summer 2010, you may feel a certain familiarity to the score.


This would be the result of Hans Zimmer's ability at transcending the films themselves. The use of pulsating bass on every track from Half Remembered Dream right through to Paradox excluding the triumphant heart rendering Time, to finish off, makes this a riveting listen.

Although there are no words or singing on any of the tracks, (which would be rare of any Hans Zimmer soundtrack), there is but one exception, on the uplifting and animated Waiting for a Train the voice of the original Edith Piaf classic Non Je Ne Regrette Rien is used only as a marker in the plot of the film for the observable kick for the characters.

Joseph Gordon-Levitt has fun in the corridor scene that looks like a hamster in a wheel

Whereas other Zimmer soundtracks like the Pirates of the Caribbean's action packed caper or Sherlock Holmes' has an undeniable Irish quality as an accompaniment; the Inception soundtrack has undeniable fundamental emotional quality to it. 

Which is surely what Christopher Nolan and Zimmer had in mind, when keeping within the dream like aesthetic feel.

Zimmer's reliant mastering of the films outlook, to the transcendence of the plot altogether, leads for enjoyable listening, signifying a true master at work, thus creating the biggest soundtracks of the past decade or more. Enjoy the dream as you listen. Or is it just a dream...






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