Friday, 25 March 2011

Doctor Who: The Specials - Murray Gold

The moment all Who fans thought would never come, David Tennant left the TARDIS after three years and a of occasional hour long specials, culminating in the understatedly titled The End of Time in which he made his last stand against the Master. Well, until they meet again of course... For his last year in time and space, Murray Gold's music receives the double disc treatment, with lengthy contributions from each Special score and over an hour from his last stand.

Tenant's last light hearted Christmas special was The Next Doctor; unsubtly playing with the audience's expectations over whether Tenant would leave sooner than expected. He didn't, but it was still a fine special, even if the Cyberking (a kind of Cyberman Iron Giant) was just a bit too silly. Gold takes the Victorian setting to heart with a grandiose main theme. Of course it's not long before it's going all action, although the swaggering Bondian brass is perhaps a touch incongruous, but Gold has always been good at setting styles off against one another. However, as the longest of the Specials outside The End of Time, it's rollicking fun throughout, although there's still time for a reflective pause in The Greats of Past Time. 

Planet of the Dead was the weakest of the Specials, seemingly dragging out a serviceable mid-season episode to an hour of unnecessary asides, a Potter-esque flying bus and creatures that seemed dimly reminiscent of Pitch Black. Gold's score is fun enough, but rather inconsequential. Waters of Mars was a much better entry; a thrilling combination of grand horror, sci-fi, time travel, a moral dilemma and the Doctor believing he can start to play god. The suite emphasises the gentler moments, touching gently on the horror and action in By Water Borne. Something of a shame that some fine action scoring was missed out, but it's properly dramatic, notably The Fate of Little Adelaide which is quite gorgeous.

Not since Tom Baker's epic send off has a Doctor's end been quite so heavily foreshadowed - indeed, previous regenerations, especially in the original series, were somewhat perfunctory affairs. However, for his last story, Russell T Davies decided to pull out all the stops, bring back the Master, the Time Lords and make it a grand epic. As ever, some of it works, some of it doesn't but importantly, it's the bits that really matter that work the best. The Master's madness and the Time Lord's (brief) return are great bluster, but the emotional substance of Tennant's last stand is brilliantly pulled off, even if the denouement is a touch drawn out, although as he enters the TARDIS for the last time, there may well have been sobbing at Chez Tom.

Gold throws more or less every trick in his musical book into the mix; gentle choirs for the Ood, a little perky town music for Donna's granddad, Wilf, a terrifically portentous version of his Gallifrey theme from the third series for The Council of Time Lords and a reprise of his whirling Master music from the same series. The circular string motif (inspired by the Wicked Witch of the West's theme from the Wizard of Oz), coupled with the four note knocking motif, never ceases to impress as an ingeniously unhinged theme for an unhinged genius. It would have been so easy to assign a fairly standard villain motif, but Gold manages to capture The Master's eccentric madness quite superbly.

As the moment approaches, Four Knocks finally tells the Doctor that his 10th incarnation's time is up, leading to Vale Decem as his regeneration takes place. As perfect a scene as the show has ever produced, Tennant's regeneration is spine tingling and wonderful, Gold's music is no small part of the reason why. Yes, it's overwrought to some extent, but when you have a lead character turning into a new man amidst huge explosions, nothing less will do. Then, as on the show, it's swiftly onto this new man as the real New Doctor starts dealing with a crashing TARDIS...

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