This this wasn’t the case with Frozen though. However, that’s also why I pretty much hate every DreamWorks score when I listen to a DreamWorks score, I instantly get pretty bored because I get feeling that every track is the same. That’s why I love all the Pixar scores and the Wreck-it Ralph score because they are novel, catchy and groundbreaking. For me a score is good when it’s something new and something that has never been done before. So hearing he was scoring Frozen made me even more excited for the film and soundtrack.įrozen has a pretty lot of score tracks, so I won’t list all the different titles here. To be honest, before he composed the 2012 Disney short Paperman, I had never heard of him, but I became a fan instantly after falling in love with that score. If you look at his musical pedigree, he basically has composed anything and everything in Hollywood from The Hangover and Burlesque to The Muppets. The score of Frozen is composed by Christophe Beck.
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Come on Disney! You hire an amazing artist that can sing beautifully and you give him a song like this? I would be more ok with “In Summer” if Jonathan at least was given another song as big and dramatic as “Let it Go” or “For The First Time in Forever.” Also I hated they gave Jonathan Groff a silly 50-second song.
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These songs just weren’t as good as the other songs. I really love most of the songs, but at the same time I don’t like “In Summer” and “Reindeer(s) Are Better Than People At All”. But they also work as standalone Disney songs, whether you know the context of the film or not. (Watch out “Part of Your World”!) Idina Menzel absolutely kills it. What I love about all these songs is that they are wonderful in the movie, by both driving the plot and narrative. There really can’t be anything more said about “Let It Go.” It’s a masterpiece and might be a contender for the new quintessential Disney “I Want” song. “Love Is an Open Door” is a quirky, even a little bit cheesy tune that works perfectly in the movie. That songs reprise is particularly interesting as it is a bit operatic a style that is rarely (if ever) used in Disney animated films. “For The First Time in Forever” is another winner and, trust me, you won’t be able to get it out of your head. “Do You Want to Build a Snowman” is a lovely song that expertly progresses the plot, showing us the world from Anna’s perspective as she grows up. Wow, this soundtrack is filled with so many wonderful songs that are destined to become Disney classics. Interestingly, while the songs do feel much more modern, they still have the feel of classic Disney songs from the Disney Renaissance. The songs are very modern, so today’s audiences that are used to pop music will definitely enjoy them. Since the songwriters come from a Broadway background, the songs are very “Broadway”, making me hope that Frozen will one day become a Broadway musical itself. I absolutely adore then and can listen to most of them on repeat all day long. Robert and Kristen did a wonderful job composing these songs. Fixer Upper – Maia Wilson and Frozen Cast.For the First Time in Forever (reprise) – Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel.Reindeer(s) Are Better Than People – Jonathan Groff.
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Love Is An Open Door – Kristen Bell, Santino Fontana.For The First Time in Forever – Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel.Do You Want to Build a Snowman? – Kristen Bell, Agatha LeeMonn, Katie Lopez.For Frozen, they wrote a total of nine songs that made the cut into the final film. The musical songs in Frozen are written by Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez, the husband-and-wife songwriting team that earlier worked on the 2011 Disney film Winnie the Pooh and Broadway’s Book of Mormon. Cover of the Deluxe Edition of the Frozen soundtrack.