@William said:
I think I'll move to Virginia City (just a few miles up the road) and become a colorful drunk. They have lots of those there.
I thought we already were. You should come and live where I am. Plenty of colourful drunks here. There's a nice place just come on the market 100 yards from the pub. £650 grand and a snip at the price. Thatched roof, plenty of parking, nice views, composers dream. I may become a real estate agent for musicians only actually. More money in it.
Seriously. Henry Mancini I believe was originally going to do the score to Frenzy(released 1972), but he and Hitchcock couldn't agree and that was that. So Ron Goodwin was finally given the score and the part you mentioned is known as the‘London Theme’ which starts the film off. Not the first time Goodwin did this on a film (remember William Walton and The Battle of Britain).He used the City of Prague Philharmonic for this (for whatever reason). Goodwin was always good at that type of thing; for example, the themes and score to Where Eagles Dare. Very good writer. His style was nothing like Herrmann of course, whereas....
I was watching What Lies Beneath the other evening and that to me is a Hitchcock pastiche right down to the camera angles, cutting and score. Entertaining film with Michele Pfeiffer doing most of the work. The score by Alan Silvestri is straight out of the Bernard Herrmann manual, especially at the end where for a moment there I thought we'd gone into Psycho. Presumably this is what the director wanted and how many times have filmscore writers 'borrowed' Herrmann's style over the last 40 years. They can never quite pull it off though, can they?
I've never seen Family Plot.