Lost(迷失 第一季)专辑介绍

本剧集为ABC自alias后提出的最具热门元素的最新剧集,播出第一集就已经拿下同时段收视冠军。主要是围绕48个遭遇空难的人,在远离陆地的一个小岛上的迷失经历。

本剧集为2004年度最值得观看的电视连续剧。美国ABC电视台斥巨资于夏威夷拍摄,整个故事情节跌宕起伏,演员表演淋漓尽致,已成为黄金时段收视率最高的电视剧之一。故事讲述了一架客机坠落在太平洋的一个孤岛上,48名乘客侥幸生还。面对这种荒芜人烟的小岛,他们如何才能生存下去呢?生还者形形色色,国籍、人种、文化背景、个性等等有着巨大的差异,14位主演中有父子,有兄妹,有朋友,也有敌人。他们既要克服恶劣的自然环境,在荒蛮的热带丛林中寻找食物、水源,还要面对在夜晚发出令所有人胆战叫声的神秘生物;更困难的是他们必须战胜个人私欲,排除隔阂与分歧,同舟共济,求得生存。

本音乐专辑为《Lost 第一季》电视原声音乐。

by Heather Phares

One of the things that makes Lost a remarkable television show is that it often feels like a long movie presented in hourlong installments as opposed to an episodic series. One of Lost's other remarkable attributes is its music, which, correspondingly, also feels more filmic than your average TV score. This disc collects all of Michael Giacchino's cues for the first season, as well as J.J. Abrams' "Main Title," which is a classic TV theme even though it's just 16 seconds long and its ominous drones barely qualify as music (in the conventional TV soundtrack sense, anyway). Many of Giacchino's cues are spare, spooky, and percussion-heavy, emphasizing the show's pulse-pounding tension as well as its remote, quasi-tribal setting; "The World's Worst Beach Party," for example, sounds like the theme to Survivor, or like the title itself says, the world's worst beach party. However, "Run Like, Um... Hell?"'s rattling percussion and shivery brass and harp show that Giacchino knows how to turn it up when necessary. The score's quirky track titles are entertaining in their own right, sometimes because they capture the moment in the show exactly ("Proper Motivation," "Just Die Already"), sometimes because they're incredibly incongruous: it's hard to reconcile that The Beautiful, Soul-Stirring Music That Accompanied Boone's Funeral is actually called "Booneral." There are terrible puns ("Crocodile Locke") and subtle ones ("Kate's Motel," the music to which is a terrific homage to Bernard Herrmann), and nearly as many allusions to pop culture and literature as there are in the actual show ("Run Away! Run Away!" is a particularly apt nod to Monty Python, while "Monsters Are Such Innnteresting People" refers to a Bugs Bunny cartoon). However wacky the titles are, they don't detract from the impact of the music. "Win One for the Reaper" is an especially lovely rendition of the show's main emotional theme, while "Locke'd Out Again" captures the poignancy of Locke's background story and his new start on the island. With its urgent strings and brass, "Hollywood and Vines" sounds like it could also appear on the soundtrack to a Western; "Navel Gazing"'s lively marimbas and harp evoke the all too rarely shown peaceful, pretty side of the island. The score even has a sense of humor (beyond the track titles) on "I've Got a Plane to Catch," the rambling acoustic piece that accompanied Hurley's hilariously complicated, ill-fated attempts to catch his flight. While Lost missed the opportunity to include "You All Everybody," the hit that Charlie had with his band Driveshaft, or Shannon's charming rendition of "La Mer," Lost geeks and soundtrack buffs in general will be delighted to own this impressive score.