Old Hollywood
Cinema
1900-1979

Nostalgia is a seductive liar - George Wildman Ball

Psycho (A Narrative for Orchestra) - composed & conducted by Bernard Herrmann (for this 1969 London Philharmonic recording, Herrmann arranged highlights from his score for Psycho, including the iconic main theme & shower scene music, into this shorter suite)

“Going far beyond the temporary shock effects of conventional scary-movie scores, the composer summons what Edmund Burke defined as terror—something deeper than horror, the sense that the world is infinitely treacherous, that no place is safe, even a comfort zone like a shower. That Herrmann used only strings, normally a Hollywood marker for schmaltzy romance, is even more startling.

Herrmann’s music did more than just enhance Psycho; it probably saved it. A story of illicit love that morphs into a crime thriller and finally a lurid horror shocker, Psycho was a sensation with audiences. But during shooting, Hitchcock became convinced it was a dud, that something fundamental was missing, and was on the verge of cutting it up and putting it on television—until he heard the music. Herrmann passionately believed in the project and was convinced it needed only his score. He composed the shower cue in secret, against Hitchcock’s explicit directive, and boldly played it for him after Hitchcock returned to the set from a Christmas break.

Hitchcock openly praised Herrmann for the Psycho score, something he rarely did with his collaborators, but Herrmann worried that Hitchcock resented his pivotal role in the film’s success. Psycho was the beginning of a tragic rift that culminated in Hitchcock publicly firing Herrmann in 1966 for disobeying his directives for Torn Curtain…According to John Williams, Hitchcock’s final composer, ‘Hitchcock may have felt that his style was too dependent on Herrmann’s music, and that may have wounded his pride. They ended up being two matadors opposing one other.’

via Hitchcock’s Psycho at 50: The Sounds of Violence

Bernard Herrmann - Vertigo:Suite/I. Prelude (via Bernard Herrmann:The Film Scores)

“As I scored it throughout, I found myself entirely in sympathy with what was going on the screen. The story was so original, so haunting, that I knew pretty much what was called for, and I dredged it from my subconscious.”

-Herrmann, quoted in Steven Smith’s A Heart at Fire’s Center: The Life and Music of Bernard Herrmann

Bernard Herrmann - Main Title (Taxi Driver: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Bernard Herrmann - Twisted Nerve Theme (originally composed for the 1968 psychological thriller Twisted Nerve, reused in Tarantino’s Kill Bill Vol. 1)

Bernard Herrmann - The Elevator/Magnetic Pull /Study/Conference /The Jewelry Store (The Day The Earth Stood Still: 20th Century Fox Film Scores)

Bernard Herrmann - Main Titles (via Sisters: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

“I launched into an eager ten minute explanation of why I didn’t want any title music…After I finished, Herrmann exploded.

‘No title music? Nothing horrible happens in your picture for the first half hour. You need something to scare them right away. The way you do it, they’ll walk out.’

‘But, in Psycho the murder doesn’t happen until 40…’

‘You are not Hitchcock! He can make his movies as slow as he wants in the beginning! And do you know why?’

I shook my head.

‘Because he is Hitchcock and they will wait! They know something terrible is going to happen and they’ll wait until it does. They’ll watch your movie for ten minutes and then they’ll go home to their television.’

Herrmann was brutal, and, of course, right.”

-Brian De Palma, quoted in A Heart at Fire’s Center: The Life and Music of Bernard Herrmann 

Alfred Hitchcock & Bernard Herrmann on the set of Psycho (1960)
“The Hitchcocks often played host to the Herrmanns, especially in the late 1950s. Recalled the third Mrs. Herrmann, Norma Shepard, “Benny used to wash dishes with Hitch, and they’d talk about what they’d do if they weren’t in the film business. Benny wanted to run an English pub, until somebody told him you actually had to open and close at certain hours. Benny asked Hitch what he would be. There was a silence. Hitchcock then turned to Benny, his apron folded on his head, and said solemnly: ‘A hanging judge‘”.
-excerpted from A Heart at Fire’s Center: The Life and Music of Bernard Herrmann

Alfred Hitchcock & Bernard Herrmann on the set of Psycho (1960)

“The Hitchcocks often played host to the Herrmanns, especially in the late 1950s. Recalled the third Mrs. Herrmann, Norma Shepard, “Benny used to wash dishes with Hitch, and they’d talk about what they’d do if they weren’t in the film business. Benny wanted to run an English pub, until somebody told him you actually had to open and close at certain hours. Benny asked Hitch what he would be. There was a silence. Hitchcock then turned to Benny, his apron folded on his head, and said solemnly: ‘A hanging judge‘”.

-excerpted from A Heart at Fire’s Center: The Life and Music of Bernard Herrmann

Bernard Herrmann - Prelude (Psycho: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)