I posted this strictly for Bernard Herrmann so that it can stay completely with this subject.
One thing I was thinking about recently was his use of the unresolved augmented and bitonal chords in "Vertigo." This was the first time anyone ever thought of regularly using a tonality which is ambiguous to suggest an ambiguous state of mind in a character. (Though it must be noted that Roy Webb, in the great Val Lewton horror features of the forties, used a lot of bitonality to hint at the psychic unease that was basic to those films). In the film at the beginning, the main character of Stewart is left hanging from the rooftop, and it is at this point that Herrmann uses the first of the so-called "vertigo chords" - an unresolved bitonal chord with doubly augmented intervals. The lack of resolution is further intensified by the shfiting between instrumental groups holding the same chords, almost doggedly.
This is related to the main theme's augmented arpeggios in harp, vibes and strings, which suggest the psychological conflict in the film's plot by their startingly unresolved repetition. This was not normal at the time in film music, by any means! In fact, it is a pointed repetition that Herrmann uses, deliberately forcing the audience to hear the lack of a calming effect of resolution normally heard.
It is extremely ironic how in the great "Theme d'amour" section, he uses an emphatic resolution of all the restlessly modulating and augmented chords at the end. And this is directly before the "discovery" of the plot of illusion and deceit that the main character has been subjected to. It is at the very point when the character believes a resolution has been achieved that everything is pulled out from under him. In other words, Herrmann has built into the very harmonic structure of the music itself the basic elements of the film's plotline and characterization.
One thing I was thinking about recently was his use of the unresolved augmented and bitonal chords in "Vertigo." This was the first time anyone ever thought of regularly using a tonality which is ambiguous to suggest an ambiguous state of mind in a character. (Though it must be noted that Roy Webb, in the great Val Lewton horror features of the forties, used a lot of bitonality to hint at the psychic unease that was basic to those films). In the film at the beginning, the main character of Stewart is left hanging from the rooftop, and it is at this point that Herrmann uses the first of the so-called "vertigo chords" - an unresolved bitonal chord with doubly augmented intervals. The lack of resolution is further intensified by the shfiting between instrumental groups holding the same chords, almost doggedly.
This is related to the main theme's augmented arpeggios in harp, vibes and strings, which suggest the psychological conflict in the film's plot by their startingly unresolved repetition. This was not normal at the time in film music, by any means! In fact, it is a pointed repetition that Herrmann uses, deliberately forcing the audience to hear the lack of a calming effect of resolution normally heard.
It is extremely ironic how in the great "Theme d'amour" section, he uses an emphatic resolution of all the restlessly modulating and augmented chords at the end. And this is directly before the "discovery" of the plot of illusion and deceit that the main character has been subjected to. It is at the very point when the character believes a resolution has been achieved that everything is pulled out from under him. In other words, Herrmann has built into the very harmonic structure of the music itself the basic elements of the film's plotline and characterization.