> music  > soundtrack channel
Join SoundtrackNet on Facebook!

Album Information

The Negotiator

The Negotiator
Restless Records (0 1877 72972-2)

Year Released: 1998

Album Format: CD

Estimated Value: ($12.00)

Contains Music by

Represented Titles

Album Ratings

SoundtrackNet Review Rating:
[3.5 / 5]
Viewer Rating (21 votes):
[Rating - 4]

Missing Information?

If any information appears to be missing from this page, contact us and let us know!

Track Listing

1.  Hostage Crisis
2.  Elegy
3.  The Troops Arrive
4.  F.U. Danny Roman
5.  The Stakeout
6.  Take The Shot
7.  No Turning Back
8.  Bluff and Double Bluff
9.  The Second Breach
10.  Chris Sabian Replaced
11.  Blow-Up
12.  The Final Breach
13.  Escape
14.  End Game
15.  End Titles

Review

by Dan Goldwasser
on June 23rd, 2001
printable Printable Version

In The Negotiator, Samuel L. Jackson plays a police hostage negotiator forced to take his boss hostage when he realizes he is being set up by Internal Affairs. He requests his own negotiator, played by Kevin Spacey. With a film full of tense moments and dramatic action, a score that would enhance (if not amplify) those moment was needed. The producers turned to composer Graeme Revell, known for his work on The Crow, The Saint, and The Craft (sense a pattern?) to write such as score.

The score to The Negotiator was released in August through Restless Records, and if you saw the film, you no doubt took notice of this very powerful and engaging score. The movie itself was a pleasant surprise, due to the ineffective marketing campaign I was expecting a film a lot worse than the one I saw. There was a lot of dramatic tension in the score, and some of it reminded me ever so slightly of "The Saint".

Stylistically, this score tends to draw closer to the type of scores typically produced at Media Ventures – it has the same percussionist approach to scoring. There is a bit of choral work, which definitely adds to the emotional impact of many scenes. The theme is not memorable enough to hum, but it is definitely prevalent throughout the score.

Some of the string work is powerful stuff – similar to the string work Trevor Jones used in G.I. Jane (coincidentally another score which sounds like it came from Media Ventures). At just a hair over 41 minutes long, this is a score that worked really well in the film, and also provides an enjoyable listening experience on its own.


RSS Feed
Subsribe to the Podcast
Subscribe with iCal

RSS Validation
CSS Validation