Bernard Herrmann: Torn Curtain, The Unused Score (Varèse Sarabande, on CD)
When asked, and probably many times when I haven't been, I've declared Bernard Herrmann as my favorite film composer. Ennio Morricone's stock has risen for me in more recent years, particularly his crime/giallo/horror soundtracks. If asked now, I'd probably give the same answer: Herrmann.
(I've doubtlessly mentioned this before, but I strongly recommend the Morricone 2 CD collection Crime and Dissonance on Ipecac Records. There are none of the "hits" on it, mostly some of the stranger cues from his various soundtracks. I say mostly because there are things like some solo organ and violin that might seem more "normal", except when sandwiched in between two weirder selections.)
I've just finished reading Steven C. Smith's book Hitchcock and Herrmann: The Friendship and Film Scores That Changed Cinema. I recommend it if you are interested in the topic. While there's just enough biographical information on both men, the majority of the text has to do with their working and friendly relationship, and the resulting scores. My only quibble would be that there's a lot of description of musical elements when I would have liked to have seen more examples. Cleary it was written with non-musicians in mind, but I would have found scored examples of Herrmann's "bitonal" chords (a term that turns up more than a couple of times) more useful than a text description. That's just my perspective.
If you're a film buff and have followed Hitchcock's work, I guess it's a question of what you believe his best film(s) might be. There are some standouts pre-Herrmann: Suspicion, Shadow of a Doubt, Notorious, Strangers on a Train (a personal favorite), Rear Window. Can there be any doubt that the Hitchcock/Herrmann years were nearly consistently great though? The Trouble With Harry, The Man Who Knew Too Much (the remake), The Wrong Man, Vertigo, North By Northwest, Psycho, The Birds, Marnie. At least three true classics and all at least worth watching. With the exception of The Birds (which has no musical score), all enhanced by Herrmann's music.
The only Oscar nomination for either man during this era went to Hitchcock for directing Psycho, which he didn't win. It demonstrates just how wrong such awards can be, how short-sighted. Herrmann won a single Oscar in 1942, beating himself for Citizen Kane. Of his other four nominations, two were posthumous. Nothing for The Day the Earth Stood Still, Hangover Square, The 7th Voyage of Sinbad.
It's ridiculous. I could go on.
In this disc, we have the full reading of the score that broke Hitchcock and Herrmann's working and personal relationship. A major factor was studio pressure on Hitchcock to have a pop music hit derived from the film. The Man Who Knew Too Much had a major hit single in with Doris Day singing "Que Sera, Sera". There were attempts to adapt the themes for Vertigo and Marnie into pop singles, with no success. Hitchcock himself also feared both a financial failure at the box office, and a lack of relevancy. He stood by Herrmann against the studio's wishes, but asked the composer to compose something lighter and more "beat" orientated.
What he got was a brooding Bernard Herrmann score. Hitchcock stopped the recording mid-session, fired Herrmann on the spot, and never spoke more than a couple of words to him for Herrmann's remaining years. There were other examples provided in the book that when Hitchcock fired or had a conflict with you, that was it. You were done with him. When Tippi Hedron asked for a few days off during the shooting of Marnie, Hitchcock was so incensed that he only directed her through intermediaries for the remainder of the shoot.
On the one hand, I don't know what Hitchcock expected. He hired Bernard Herrmann and that's what he got. On the other, Herrmann probably shouldn't have accepted the assignment. Everyone would have seen how inferior the project was without his contribution. But he was desperate for work at the time, especially considering he had proverbially burned all of his bridges in Hollywood at the time. Nobody wanted to work with him.
Herrmann saw a late career boost from Francois Truffaut, hiring Herrmann to score Fahrenheit 451. Other younger directors followed: Brian DePalma, Larry Cohen, and most importantly Martin Scorsese. He had more work lined up before he died, including Cohen's God Told Me To and DePalma's Carrie. I would have loved to have heard what he did with the latter. My guess is it would have improved that film too. (The library music during the prom queen scene has always irritated me.)
There's an interest take that Herrmann had regarding film orchestration. His idea was, it's really only one performance, so why repeat the same ensemble each time? Even his most standard orchestration, the string orchestra for Psycho, becomes more interesting when you know that the monochromatic color is inspired by the monochromatic palette of the film.
I forget the exact orchestration he used here, but it was on the ridiculous side. An orchestra that included twelve flutes. It's heavy on the French horns and trombones, and lower strings.
Truth is, it's not an exceptional score. Individual tracks often sound like just about any other Herrmann score. Like many audio releases of film scores, taken as a whole it's too much. Here's where I make another recommendation that I've probably made before. Esa-Pekka Salonen conducted the LA Philharmonic in a program of selections from eight of Herrmann's film scores. While in some cases I prefer the original recording (Taxi Driver particularly), as a collection it's much tighter and doesn't have the opportunity to get boring.
Hitchcock's films were never again as good as that era. It's not necessarily because of a lack of Bernard Herrmann's contributions, but that certainly didn't help. Almost ironically, for his final score for Taxi Driver Bernard composed a beautiful jazz ballad rather in the Ellington/Strayhorn style. While not exactly a pop single, it proved he could write a conventional melody with chords, and a pretty damned fine one at that. I can only speculate what he might have done with Carrie.










