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La Land [Original Motion Picture Soundtrack] [LP]
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Barnes and Noble
La Land [Original Motion Picture Soundtrack] [LP]
Current price: $12.59
Barnes and Noble
La Land [Original Motion Picture Soundtrack] [LP]
Current price: $12.59
Loading Inventory...
Size: CD
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A musical romance about a jazz pianist (
) and an aspiring actress (
) set in the City of Angels, La La Land was written and directed by
, the man behind the 2014 Oscar winner Whiplash. He enlisted his former Harvard roommate
to write the songs and score for the film. The pair also worked together on Whiplash, about drummers, and on a 2009 student project that went on to receive theatrical distribution, Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench, about a jazz trumpeter.
is joined here by lyricists
and
, two veterans of musical theater (the off-Broadway musical Dogfight, TV's Smash, Broadway's Dear Evan Hansen) at the relatively young age of 31 by the time of release. (The latter is also true of
.)
's original soundtrack includes both songs and instrumentals, with the songs performed by a cast that also includes
, fresh off his Oscar win for Selma's "Glory," and
, a musician-turned-actress.
performs alongside
,
, and
on "Someone in the Crowd," a soaring, uptempo number with swing-era rhythms. Preceding it, the film opens with a big production number set in L.A. traffic that
said was inspired by
-
film musicals of the '60s ("Another Day of Sun"). While listeners and moviegoers alike will find that
don't quite have the singing chops of an
, their voices are warm and approachable, and their duet "A Lovely Night," in particular, is a bright charmer. Later,
delivers the goods on "Start a Fire," a song written in the context of a jazz musician trying to cross over to the contemporary mainstream. Score tracks range from the tender-slash-anxious piano piece "Mia & Sebastian's Theme," to the legit jazz exercise "Herman's Habit," to the Romantic tone poem "Planetarium." The film and the soundtrack wrap up with a second reprise of
's "City of Stars," this time hummed by
, which will likely provide a feel-good earworm after the music ends. ~ Marcy Donelson