A Bug's Life: An Original Walt Disney Records Soundtrack is the soundtrack to the 1998 Disney/Pixar film A Bug's Life featuring original music composed by Randy Newman and released on October 27, 1998 by Walt Disney Records.[1] Aside the instrumental cues accompanying the album, it also features an original song "The Time of Your Life" written and performed by Newman.[2]
In Japan, the film's image song is "STAND" by the Japanese band Hoff Dylan. It is also the first song on the Japanese version of the film's soundtrack.[4]
Reception
Alex Henderson of AllMusic rated three out of five stars to the album, summarising: "A Bug's Life isn't an essential purchase by any means, although some of Newman's more hardcore and devoted fans might find it mildly interesting to hear this other side of him."[5] Ian Freer of Empire also rated three stars and called it as "very likeable but ultimately does not grab the attention as well as it might".[6]Filmtracks.com wrote "A Bug's Life could leave non-Randy Newman fans cold. His jazz is predictable and his generic orchestral animation music begs for more personality. The highlights of both Newman's own Pleasantville from the same year and the competing Antz are superior to anything heard here."[7] Rating four-and-a-half stars out of five, James Southall of Movie Wave called the film's score as "the best of Newman's scores for Pixar" as it "lends itself better than the others to album treatment due to its more flowing, less bitty nature".[8]
Far Out ranked third in the best of Newman's scores (top 10).[9] Writing for that article, Calum Russell summarised: "Randy Newman’s Bug’s Life score is a joy to listen to, taking the listener immediately back to Pixar’s animated world as it so well recreates the essence of the chaos of the city or the intensity of a bird sighting."[9] Also ranking in their top 10 of the composer's best scores, Dalton Norman of Screen Rant wrote "Newman understood what was expected of him and his score is just as fun and jaunty as his previous Pixar outing. He proved he could work cleverly with scope and scale with his music by shrinking the orchestrations down in scenes that needed simplicity. The film is about a tiny world and the music reflects both the smallness of the world and the overwhelming size of Flik's adventure."[10]
^Noyer, Jérémie. "Monsters, Inc.'s Composer Randy Newman: "I score because I care!"". Animated Views. Retrieved May 19, 2023. The people at Pixar liked that 1940s jazz. I did it in Bug's Life and they loved it when I did Flick going to the City and stuff like that. So, it was essentially what they wanted.
^Higgins, Bill; Hontz, Jenny (December 16, 1998). "'Truman,' Bard win noms". Variety. Archived from the original on January 12, 2018. Retrieved January 11, 2018.