A couple others of my other favorite Herrmann scores -
"On Dangerous Ground" which is a somewhat less known but great film noir with Ida Lupino, Robert Ryan. This has the famous "Death Hunt" section with a fabulous, virtuosic use of horn section playing triplets to accompany the chase of an escaped killer in the snowy wilderness. Also, some very lyrical, tender string writing for the scenes which show the loneliness of the blind character of Ida Lupino. It is one of his best scores though no one ever seems to talk about it.
"Jason and the Argonauts" For the Harryhausen spectacle, Herrmann was not only inspired by the great animation effects but also by the mythological subject. An example is the transformation of Hermes from an old man into a god culminating with Jason's appearance at Olympus. It starts with a quiet harp and solo woodwinds in a plaintive, sad mood. Then more of the woodwind ensemble joins in, with stronger, heavier block chords in tertiary progressions. Fanfares sound, and then all Heaven breaks loose with chimes, glockenspiel, full brass ensemble and harp glissandi. It is something only a master of both the art and technique of orchestration could ever write and it creates the entire cinematic experience as vividly as the filmed shots themselves.
By the way a great new recording faithful to the screen tempos came out recently, conducted by Bruce Broughton with the Sinfonia of London. It is one of the best film music recordings I've ever heard, and the recording is particularly striking. The sound was delberately recorded with a very tight, clean ambience in a smaller space - not the typical "majestic" huge reverberant hall. This makes the percussion and fast attacked brass parts all the more clear and strong, and the multiple harp parts individually audible.
"On Dangerous Ground" which is a somewhat less known but great film noir with Ida Lupino, Robert Ryan. This has the famous "Death Hunt" section with a fabulous, virtuosic use of horn section playing triplets to accompany the chase of an escaped killer in the snowy wilderness. Also, some very lyrical, tender string writing for the scenes which show the loneliness of the blind character of Ida Lupino. It is one of his best scores though no one ever seems to talk about it.
"Jason and the Argonauts" For the Harryhausen spectacle, Herrmann was not only inspired by the great animation effects but also by the mythological subject. An example is the transformation of Hermes from an old man into a god culminating with Jason's appearance at Olympus. It starts with a quiet harp and solo woodwinds in a plaintive, sad mood. Then more of the woodwind ensemble joins in, with stronger, heavier block chords in tertiary progressions. Fanfares sound, and then all Heaven breaks loose with chimes, glockenspiel, full brass ensemble and harp glissandi. It is something only a master of both the art and technique of orchestration could ever write and it creates the entire cinematic experience as vividly as the filmed shots themselves.
By the way a great new recording faithful to the screen tempos came out recently, conducted by Bruce Broughton with the Sinfonia of London. It is one of the best film music recordings I've ever heard, and the recording is particularly striking. The sound was delberately recorded with a very tight, clean ambience in a smaller space - not the typical "majestic" huge reverberant hall. This makes the percussion and fast attacked brass parts all the more clear and strong, and the multiple harp parts individually audible.