Carter Burwell专辑介绍:by Heather PharesCarter Burwell's score for The Alamo incorporates, aptly enough, elements of music from the Old West into his intricately melodic and percussive style. Cues such as What We're Defending have a typically rousing, patriotic mix of strings and horns, but even then Burwell finds a way to give these moments some of his character by ending the track with a contemplative harp. Mexican musical motifs also come through on tracks like the charming El Bexareno, which moves from playful flutes and mariachi horns into bittersweet strings. Still other tracks, like 300 Miles of Snow, have a folky, Western cast to them. The score also juxtaposes radically different pieces, such as the ominous Who Took Their Loved Ones and the lighthearted Listen to the Mockingbird Sing. Deguello de Crockett is an especially striking track, pairing lonesome fiddles with martial drums and brass. But the main attraction of the score, is, of course, the music that accompanies the battle of the Ala