@Nick Batzdorf said:
Hey Paul, just curious what you mean by that. Do you mean that the way it works with the picture isn't as brilliant as the music itself, but almost?
(My favorite is the going up the stairs cue.)
Well, maybe Vertigo is technically better Nick - that is a matter of conjecture. What I meant (strapped for time at the last post) is that regardless of a person's taste i.e whether one likes Psycho or not as a movie, the film is a template on how all films could be made. What do I mean by that? Well, you would probably have had all this rammed down your throat at Berklee, I don't know.
The way the film is cut. The way, after cutting, Herrmann uses the techniques he does regarding the cues. The music is obviously nothing but strings all the way through i.e no horns, windwinds etc. The strings are all muted with no vibrato for that cold effect. He employs creepy serialism etc. Loads of filmic teqniques etc - that have been copied over and over again.
Yeah - haha! The going up the stairs with Martin Balsam is a great cue - no vibrato and very ppp until the now almost cliche sliding of the strings to high pitches - perhaps the most famous cue in cinematic history as used in the shower scene. As you know, Hitchcock didn't want any music at all for the shower scene - so this could lead one to think that logically he didn't want any music for the going up the stairs scene. Don't know the answer to that one.
My favourite cue from any film actually on personal taste level is the driving through the rain cue, which is also the opening Saul Bass title with very slight variations - also used when she drives away from the cop when found asleep in the car. Amazing piece of writing. Also the serialistic final cue named Madhouse. The bit with the fly on the hand. A hugely humerous film in places - yes, as I get older, I can see what Hitchcock meant when he said he thought Psycho was actually funny in places.
On a non personal basis, this is surely the most effective music to film ever written in movie history. Who else then, or even now, could have written that score. I would suggest no one. The man was a genius at times, and downright lazy at other times, depending on his mood, which could be 'difficult'.
In terms of effectiveness, which should be paramount to any filmscore writer, Psycho takes it - but reagrding Vertigo, as Bill mentions, then you are talking about a score that is very much part of the actual narrative of the film. Long periods of no dialogue that is filled with the mood Herrmann wishes you feel. On top of that, one has the opening Saul Bass titles, which has arguably the best opening scoring of any movie, leading into the actual chase scene on the rooftops. Quite a staggering piece of work that maybe only musicians can really appreciate, although this music from the start is explaining to the audience they are definitely not watching a comedy, for instance.
North by Northwest just shows huge depth in the writing of the opening titles, again by Saul Bass. Very exciting music and expertly written - and difficult when analysing. Great music to have on in the car - loud. You suddenly find yourself driving at 120 mph along a cliff top - hammered out of your mind. Hugely exhilerating.
All in all, these three examples of Herrmann's work are a must for anyone interested in filmscoring - provided that they don't seperate the film from the music. That is the whole point of this type of writing in the first place.
I would say that even crappy, bollocks-up musicians, like gugliel, would gain a modicum of positive energy from this type of writing - naturally based on limited IQ etc.