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Showing posts with label score. Show all posts
Showing posts with label score. Show all posts

Sunday, April 26, 2009

A Quarter-Century of Krueger: The Music of Nightmares

When you think of the truly classic horror film themes, there's no question that A Nightmare on Elm Street's unforgettable score comes to mind, right alongside the likes of Halloween, Psycho, Hellraiser, etc. Yet, when you think of the great composers of film scores, the name of Charles Bernstein does not immediately come to mind. It should.

Bernstein has been scoring motion pictures for 40 years now, his work gracing such pictures as the Charles Bronson cult classic Mr. Majestyk (1974), as well as a slew of grindhouse-style faves. But his work in the horror genre is what truly distinguishes Bernstein as an important composer of film music. For his material can be heard on the soundtrack of flicks like Love at First Bite (1979), The Entity (1981), Cujo (1983), April Fool's Day (1986) and Deadly Friend (1986).

But his most memorable work of all is undoubtedly the synth-laden, appropriately surreal and atonal accompaniment for Wes Craven's original A Nightmare on Elm Street in 1984. His brief Freddy Krueger cue (found below) is definitely amongst the most recognizable ten-note sequences in horror, if not in all of American cinema. Its warped, sing-songy flavor brilliantly sums up Krueger's character, a destroyer of childhood innocence--just as much as the iconic "One, two, Freddy's coming for you" jingle that permeates the film/series. We can forgive its '80s datedness because it possesses that most important trait of any film score--it fits the film for which it was written perfectly.

A supremely prolific and competent composer of film music, Charles Bernstein is a Juilliard graduate and gifted performer in his own right, having played jazz in the cellars of Paris, and folk music with Greeks and gypsies in the Balkans. He is the author of two esteemed volumes on movie music, and currently chairs the vice-presidency of the Motion Picture Academy with Tom Hanks.

"I have scored well over 100 films, yet when I begin working on a project it always feels like the very first one," Bernstein once said, and its that kind of approach that makes a score like A Nightmare on Elm Street--perhaps the only one for which he is truly known by casual movie fans--such an unforgettable and unique one.

Freddy's Theme

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Johan Soderqvist's Let the Right One In: A Score as Transcendent as the Movie For Which It Was Written

I'm one of those movie fanatics who has also been deeply obsessed with quality film scores. Collected them all my life, from vinyl, to cassette, to CD, to download. Every now and then I have the pleasure of discovering one that really blows me away, and I have to shout to the rooftops about how great it is. The latest one to rock my world in this way is Johan Soderqvist's sublime motion picture soundtrack for Tomas Alfredson's sublime motion picture Let the Right One In. It's certainly no accident that it won the 2008 Cyber Horror Award for Best Score.

Anyone who's watched and loved the movie is bound to have already been struck by the beauty of its score, but its only when you listen to it on its own, and focus on the music itself, that you really appreciate how excellent it is. This is movie music of the highest order--not only listenable on its own merits, but matched perfectly to the specific events of the movie it was written for, the very quality that helped catapult John Williams to film score superstardom.

The score is dominated by two main themes, which are essentially linked to the movie's two central characters, Oskar and Eli. In fact, the main theme of Let the Right One In is specifically entitled "Eli's Theme", and man does this Nino Rota-esque melody pack a powerful emotional punch. Initially iterated using a full string section, it pops up later on in tracks like "The Father" in the form of solo guitar. And finally, in the title track that accompanies the closing credits, it begins in guitar form, and then the strings take it over, "sweetening it into a phrase of such delight," as Salieri described Mozart's "Gran Partita" Serenade in Amadeus.

In short, this utterly beguiling theme epitomizes the ethereal combination of sadness and otherwordly beauty embodied by Eli, the ageless vampire trapped in the body of a little girl.

The film's other major theme is more closely associated with Eli's devoted human friend, Oskar. First presented in the track "Oskar in Love", it takes the form of a simple, understated piano melody that captures not only the enigmatic character of Oskar, but also the quiet, almost stark beauty of the Swedish landscape in which the movie's action takes place.

One of the most remarkable things Soderqvist does with this particular theme occurs in the track
"Death of Hakan", which accompanies the scene in which Oskar witnesses Eli murdering the revenge-minded local who comes to her apartment. As Oskar takes in this decidedly sinister side of the girl he loves for the very first time, the already established Oskar theme goes from a hopeful major key to a much more foreboding minor one. This is thoughtful movie scoring.

And speaking of sinister, don't think the whole score is composed entirely of touchy-feely sweet stuff. This is a horror movie after all, and there's plenty of suitably atonal, ambient fare to be found, particularly in tracks such as "The Slaughter", "Hiding the Body", and "Lacke Dies". Prodigious use of rolling kettle drums and clanking metal sound effects provide the needed air of dread, and remind the listener of the duality of this picture.

In fact, it's rare that you'll find such a schizophrenic score that pulls it off so well, switching from poignant to dark and malevolent from one track to the next. And in the track "Eli Bleeds", Soderqvist even manages to transition between the two, going from horrifying, as Eli stands in Oskar's threshold oozing dark plasma from her pores, to the bright love theme once Oskar gives her permission to enter and the bleeding stops.

But for my money, the Let the Right One In score is much more about Soderqvist's touching and mesmerizing major themes than the more run-of-the-mill, slightly repetitive stuff that represents the "horror end" of things. The melodies that Soderqvist has crafted here deserve major attention, and one can only hope that this piece will lead to a more mainstream (read: American) audience soon discovering his work. This is movie music at its finest. Pick it up now.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Rare Jerry Goldsmith Score Finally Released on CD

For all those like me, whose movie obsession includes a great affinity for film music, there's some great news for you, courtesy of Film Score Monthly. For the first time on an American CD, Jerry Goldsmith's eclectic score for the 1983 flick The Twilight Zone: The Movie has been released.

It's a very limited edition of 3,000 copies, but this is a big deal for one of horror filmdom's most sought-after scores, which hasn't seen the light of day domestically since the original LP release 25 years ago. From then till now, a 2000 European bootleg CD was the only other way for fans to hear one of the master's best pieces of music.

So get yourself over to Screen Archives Entertainment's site for a complete track list and some sample audio clips. Oh yeah, and you can order it there, too.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Buffy Score Finally Made Available

Earlier this month, after years of fan requests, Rounder Records finally released a CD (also available on iTunes) of the score from the Buffy the Vampire Slayer TV series.

The show went off the air five years ago, yet remains as popular as ever among its fervent fan base. The music, by Christophe Beck, features themes from seasons two through five. Here's the exact lineup:

SEASON 2:
1. Massacre (from "Becoming") (03:56)
2. Angel Waits (from "Passion") (01:43)
3. Remembering Jenny (from "Passion") (01:51)
4. Twice the Fool (from "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered") (00:48)
5. Moment of Happiness (from "Innocence") (02:13)
6. Loneliness of Six (from "Lover's Walk") (01:52)

SEASON 3:
7. Sugar High (from "Band Candy") (01:43)
8. Tai Chi (from "Band Candy") (01:11)
9. Kralik's House (from "Helpless") (02:23)
10. Magic Snow Music (from "Amends") (02:41)
11. Slayer's Elegy (from "The Wish") (01:55)
12. Faith's End (from "Graduation Day") (02:44)
13. Drink Me (from "Graduation Day") (01:26)
14. One Last Moment (from "Graduation Day") (01:07)

SEASON 4:
15. Haunted (from "Fear Itself") (01:16)
16. From the Grave (from "This Year's Girl") (01:53)
17. Demon Got Your Tongue (from "Hush") (02:39)
18. Golf Claps (from "Hush") (01:19)
19. The Princess Screams (from "Hush") (04:02)
20. Spellbound (from "Who Are You?") (02:37)
21. Fyarl in the Morning (from "A New Man") (01:54)
22. A Really Big Sandbox (from "Restless") (01:20)
23. Spaghetti (from "Restless") (01:17)
24. Body Paint (from "Restless") (01:38)
25. Xander's Nightmare (from "Restless") (01:49)

SEASON 5:
26. The Tower (from "The Gift") (02:06)
27. Losing Battle (from "The Gift") (01:48)
28. Apocalypse (from "The Gift") (02:25)
29. Sacrifice (Alternate Version, from "The Gift") (02:09)


If you're interested, here's the Amazon link. Me, I've never been much of a fan. Besides, my vampire fix is being thoroughly quenched these days by HBO's engrossing True Blood. But I'll save that for a later post...

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Universal Names a Composer for The Wolf Man

Ain't It Cool News has broken a particularly cool bit of news this evening, namely that none other than Danny Elfman will be scoring the impending remake of Universal classic The Wolf Man, starring Benicio Del Toro.

Elfman is of course, one of the old war horses of movie scores, having plied his trade for nigh onto a quarter century. However, if I may throw a small monkey wrench into th geekworks here, he is not really known as a composer of "heavy" material. His work tends have a sort of quirky, oddball, whimsical feel to it, evidenced in flicks like Pee-Wee's Big Adventure and Beetle Juice. And really, the only straight-ahead horror movies he's ever scored have been Red Dragon, Sleepy Hollow and Nightbreed.

Nevertheless, his work can occasionally have a grim, foreboding feel to it, most famously in his iconic Batman theme. Hopefully, we get more of that and less of his trademark "la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la" stuff.

My personal choice would've been veteran Polish composer Wojciech Kilar, who knocked it out of the park in 1992 with the score for Bram Stoker's Dracula. Although he's been around since the '50s, Kilar made his name among American audiences with that stellar score. Surprisingly, the only horror score he's done since has been Roman Polanski's The Ninth Gate (1999). His epic creepiness and Central European flavor would've been dead-on. But Elfman's no slouch, I'll give him the benefit of the doubt. What say you people?
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