

That the song “features” Lamar is only true for the first - and best - moments of the track. Within three minutes, she crams lyrics like “eye of the tiger,” “there’s no day off for heroes,” “fate has spoken” and “a lonely hero trying to fight my battles” into a mishmash of catch-phrases as tired as they are uninspired. Riddled with cliches, lazy phrasing and a concept seemingly rushed on deadline, the track is justifiably buried at the bottom of Disc 2. This is a release best consumed through streaming services - if only to punish Keys for her entry, “It’s on Again.” It’s certainly not recommended for kids.īut why consider buying a “deluxe edition” of this soundtrack? The label is banking on the bonus tracks, which feature new music from Alicia Keys, Pharrell, the Neighborhood, LIZ, Phosphorescent and, for a brief moment, Kendrick Lamar. Still, tracks like “Sum Total” and “That Spider Guy” might be good for weight-lifting, and the hypnotic “Electro Suite,” at over 12 minutes of bass wobble and creepy chanting, will freak out the easily spooked. But the all-star band conceit for such an endeavor, while impressive, seems pointless given that the goal of a great score is to vanish within the story, serving its needs without pulling viewers away to contemplate a Smiths reunion, or whatever it is Pharrell actually did here. Through two-plus hours of music from and “inspired” by the latest installment of Marvel’s superhero franchise, the release offers 31 pieces - screeching chase-scene strings, dubstep-inspired menace, synthesized melodies - to accompany Andrew Garfield’s arachnoid acrobatics.Ī favorite for these kinds of films, Hans Zimmer composed music to be performed by a band dubbed the Magnificent Six: Pharrell Williams, Johnny Marr (the Smiths, Electronic), Michael Einziger (Incubus), Junkie XL, Andrew Kawczynski and Steve Mazzaro. Outside of the darkened theater, what use are stand-alone action movie soundtracks such as “The Amazing Spider-Man 2"? As a tool to relive Hollywood action via headphones while pretending to leap tall buildings? To add big-screen drama to, say, the act of filing your taxes?
