Hidden Figures (Original Score) is the score album jointly composed by Hans Zimmer, Pharrell Williams and Benjamin Wallfisch for the 2016 American biographicaldrama filmHidden Figures. It was released on January 9, 2017, by Sony Masterworks.[1] The score consists of gospel music blended with acoustic and electronic music, to provide computer-like textures. It additionally featured African-American female vocalists performing the background score, and had featured several musical artists, including Herbie Hancock to work on the score.
Zimmer and Wallfisch initially provided the first set of score cues, with Williams, who co-wrote the original songs for the film and produced the soundtrack.[3] The score was mostly drawn from Williams' original songs featured in the soundtrack. Wallfisch stated that "the bass lines, the chord progressions, the rhythmic intensity — building the score from that place meant there could be a real dance between the score and the songs throughout the movie, a synergy".[4]
Both the composers worked to include Afro-American women to provide vocals in the film score, as Zimmer in an interview to The Hollywood Reporter, said that "Either you have the idea of mathematics, which is the Philip Glass thing, or you have preconceived ideas like The Right Stuff (1983) or Apollo 13 (1995). But nothing in the music ever hints at an African-American, let alone female, undercurrent."[5] As a result, they approached several female players from the Afro-American community, across the world while also featuring prominent musicians, including jazz player Herbie Hancock to play the piano.[6]
"We flew players in from all over the country, and we had this truly extraordinary string section. The sound was more beautiful and more committed…because everybody knew what they were playing because they were playing about themselves. And that is sort of the way music is supposed to work"
Kim Burrell and Clydene Jackson provided solo vocals, with choirs from Dallas and Los Angeles, providing the gospel score. The composers worked on "examining the harmonies and infusing them into the thematic writing".[3] Speaking to Variety magazine, Wallfisch attributed that one of his guitarist friends had pulsed textures, and included them through several passes of a tape emulator to bring back to the sound of those early reel-to-reel machines and moog synthesisers, reversed and layered those tunes. He attributed that the "sound and the piano became the sound of Katherine's brain".[3] He also stated that the trumpet lines, were inspired from Miles Davis' compositions, which consists of solo jazz elements.[4][7]
The score blends electric guitars with acoustic cues to bring "computer-like, technical textures".[8] Wallfisch commented that "We used the core-progressions and harmonic sensibility of gospel music, even with a choir, it’s the way you voice the string chords, somehow effortlessly gave us that language for the score."
Track listing
Hidden Figures (Original Score)
No.
Title
Length
1.
"Katherine"
02:33
2.
"Mission Control"
01:15
3.
"I'd Already Be One"
01:08
4.
"Space Task Group"
02:56
5.
"Slice of Pie"
01:04
6.
"Redacted"
01:24
7.
"With All the Angels"
01:34
8.
"Redstone"
01:36
9.
"Call Your Wives"
03:20
10.
"Launch"
02:19
11.
"That's Just The Way Things Are"
02:23
12.
"Sign"
01:11
13.
"Kitchen Kiss"
00:55
14.
"Mary and the Judge"
01:29
15.
"I Like Her Numbers"
02:03
16.
"Ladies' March"
01:23
17.
"Mary and Levi"
02:11
18.
"Euler's Method"
01:23
19.
"Proposal"
01:39
20.
"Katherine Calculates"
01:32
21.
"Pearls"
02:39
22.
"Lift Off"
03:11
23.
"Warning Light"
00:58
24.
"Rocket Peril"
03:09
25.
"Hidden Figures"
03:49
26.
"Epilogue"
00:36
Reception
Filmtracks.com wrote "While the character of the score remains cohesive outside of this celebration motif, the themes, oddly enough, are only faintly coherent, and they make no obvious connections to the songs. The various motifs seem to waft through the score seemingly without tightly associating with particular characters. Thus, you have a combined compositional effort involving Zimmer that continues to cause some issues with narrative continuity, but Hidden Figures manages to overcome these issues with its tightly knit cultural personality" and concluded "a delightfully competent handling of the subject despite its sometimes wandering motific assignments".[9] Marvelous Geeks Media had stated the score as "incredibly refreshing and beautiful" and further wrote "The harmonies in the background of certain tracks add a sense of serenity that’s hard to miss when listening to the album, and once you’re one track in, it’s nearly impossible to stop listening until you’ve finished the entire album."[10]
Recording engineers – Seth Waldmann, Alfredo Pasquel, Denis St. Amand
Score engineers – Chuck Choi, Stephanie McNally
Musical assistance – Cynthia Park
Technical assistance – Max Sandler
Music coordinator – Joann Orgel
Music editor – Catherine Wilson, Richard Ford
Music supervision – Anton Monsted
Music preparation – Booker White
Mastering – Patric Sullivan
Mixing – John Witt Chapman, Mick Guzauski
Vocal recordist – Mike Larson
Score recordist – Kevin Globerman, Alan Meyerson, Tim Lauber
Backing vocals – Alfie Silas Durio, Angel Robinson, Bobette Harrison, Briana Lee, Carmel Echols, Carmen Carter, Carmen Twillie, Charlean Carmon, Clydene Jackson, Debette Draper, Denise Carite, Deonis Cook, Dorian Holley, Edie Lehmann Boddicker, Elgin A. Johnson, Eric Birdine, Eternia Garrett, Faith Anderson, James McCrary, Jim Gilstrap, Josef Powell, KieAndria Ellis, Kim Burrell, Linda Fisher, Louis Price, Myron Butler, Nathan Myers, Nayanna Holley, Niya Cotton, Sheléa Frazier, Sobya Ball, Stevie Mackey, Tameka Sanford
Solo vocals – Clydene Jackson, Kim Burrell
Featured musicians:
Cello – Adrienne Woods, Armen Ksajikian, Cecilia Tsan, Giovanna Clayton, Jacob Braun, Michelle Elliott, Paula Hochhalter, Vanessa Freebairn-Smith, Xiaodan Helen Altenbach, Steve Erdody
Contrabass – Drew Dembowski, Edward Meares, Karl Vincent-Wickliff, Michael Valerio, Oscar Hidalgo, Stephen Dress, Nico Carmine Abondolo
Horn – Dylan Hart, Steve Becknell, Andrew Bain
Saxophone – Bob Sheppard, Daniel Higgins
Piano – Herbie Hancock
Trombone – John Lofton, Andrew Martin, Alexander Iles
Trumpet – Barry Perkins, Daniel Fornero, Wayne Bergeron, Thomas Hooten, Johnny Britt
Viola – Alma Fernandez, Andrew Duckles, Brian Dembow, Dale Hikawa-Silverman, David Walther, John Zach Dellinger, Laura Pearson, Lynne Richburg, Matthew Funes, Meredith Crawford, Nikki Shorts, Robin Ross, Sharon Ray, Shawn Mann, Robert A. Brophy
Violin – Alyssa Park, Amy Hershberger, Ana Landauer, Bianca McClure, Chris Woods, Crystal Alforque, Dale Briedenthal, Grace Oh, Helen Nightengale, Irina Voloshina, Jessica Guideri, Josefina Vergara, Kevin Kumar, Lauren Baba, Lisa Liu, Luanne Homzy, Lucia Micarelli, Maia Jasper White, Mark K. Cargill, Maya Magub, Melissa White, Nadira Scruggs, Neil Samples, Phillip Levy, Roberto Cani, Ron Clark, Sara Parkins, Sarah Thornblade, Serena McKinney, Shalini Vijayan, Sharon Jackson, Shigeru Logan, Songa Lee, Susan Chatman, Tamara Hatwan, Tereza Stanislav, Julie Ann Gigante
Orchestra and choir:
Orchestrator – David Krystal
Additional orchestration – Edward Trybek, Henri Wilkinson
Assistant orchestrator – Kory McMaster, Sean Barrett
Orchestra leader – Tim Williams
Orchestra conductor – Timothy Williams
Orchestra contractor – Peter Rotter
Choir contractor– Edie Lehmann Boddicker
Choir arrangements – Kirk Franklin
Business affairs – Tom Cavanaugh
Executive in-charge of music – Danielle Diego
Music clearance – Ellen Ginsburg
Music management – Johnny Choi
Music production services – Steven Kofsky
Music production supervision – Rebecca Morellato
Stage managers – Christine Sirois, Tom Steel, Shalini Singh