Paul,
Thanks for checking it out, and so thoroughly. I appreciate all that you said. Especially about it having my own stamp on it. That is very exciting. I have been trying to find my own voice for over 15 years. I agree though. I really think I haven't heard anything like it before (perhaps only by Herrmann), and it alerted me that maybe it sounds like ... well ... me. What a nice feeling.
I did very much consider doing it all strings and frankly most of the score will be all strings. But the film audience nor the film itself could hold under that pressure. So so far I am doing a dark double brass ensemble, Piccolo, B.Cl, Contrabassoon, Timpani, perhaps a mallet or two (Vibes, Xylo), Calliope, and Strings.
I am also choosing this instrumentation partly in that it is very close in color to this directors last film, HUNTING HUMANS. As Herrmann gave Hitch a certain sound of his own, I wanted to also attempt that with this director.
I wanted to create a seriously foreboding dark, yet bouncy feel. Not light or light hearted by any means. Something that although coming out of the traditional circus oom-pah motifs, actually took it so seriously that it was menacing. And so you have that little riff in the bass woodwinds and strings, which is the intro to the main themes.
I think this score will be close to Herrmann's SISTERS. In fact I think anyone who can enjoy SISTERS ought to find mine a kind of sister score (pun intended). I have not seen Sisters. I have it on DVD. I have the score and listened to it a few times about 5 years ago. But I do remember it.
A draw and tendency that arose on this film was to use a really great synth sound. Not a cheesy one mind you, but something with merit. I recalled great use of synth in films like "Halloween" and "Christine" and "The Thing". But after thinking about the "WHY" of it, which I always do with every note I write (each note is very purposeful), I realized that the reason synth works in those films is that they are dealing with the supernatural. here I am dealing with a demented killer. A story, as grotesque as it is (lobbing off heads with a medieval axe), is no more than a human story of only natural proportions.
After I complete the Main Titles I will post a link to it. it's gonna run the gamut.
Oh, and about the jazzy stuff you saw. No not really. I am triadic composer. However, one of my calling cards is the use of polytonality, polyrhythms, and polymeters. So sometimes stacked triadic chords can come across as jazz rooted, but I never learned Jazz (ironically). I understand it, can notate it, but never crafted it or harnessed it. I am a classical guy through and through. That's why I like Pink Floyd so much!!!!
[:)]
Evan Evans