>From Today's Wall Street Journal.  Enjoy.  Kirby McDaniel   www.movieart.net

        • MUSIC
        • JUNE 29, 2011

'Psycho' Maestro at 100
By JIM FUSILLI

Bernard Herrmann may be best known for his memorable contributions to classic 
films, including his rousing overture to "North by Northwest," the shower scene 
in "Psycho," the romantic themes of "Vertigo," the eerie electronic music in 
"The Day the Earth Stood Still" and the desolate blues of "Taxi Driver." He 
might have preferred to be celebrated for his opera "Wuthering Heights," 
symphonies and cantatas such as "Moby Dick," and other concert works. According 
to the film composer John Williams, Herrmann's greatest ambition was to be 
recognized as a conductor.

Nevertheless, Herrmann's lasting legacy remains his work in the entertainment 
industry: the music for 48 feature films; for television shows such as "The 
Twilight Zone" (his music for the episode "Walking Distance" is one of his most 
poignant works); and for countless radio dramas, including Orson Welles's "The 
Mercury Theater on the Air."

Thus Herrmann became America's greatest film composer not on the basis of a few 
extraordinary pieces, but for an unsurpassed and complex body of work in the 
service of story. No other composer so consistently enriched the audience's 
understanding of a character's emotional and psychological state.

"That was his great skill—his understanding of the psychology of character," 
the film composer Howard Shore said.
Wednesday marks Herrmann's centenary, an occasion for countless celebrations of 
his music and legacy. (See www.bernardherrmann.org.) Born in New York to 
Russian immigrants in 1911, he proved a musical prodigy, playing violin and 
piano at DeWitt Clinton High School and demonstrating a facility for 
composition. Later, he embraced the music of Claude Debussy and the English 
composers Edward Elgar and Ralph Vaughan Williams. He also admired the U.S. 
experimentalist Charles Ives.

"He was really a traditionalist," Mr. Williams said. "He was suspicious of 
modernity. But he was also an advocate for neglected composers."

As a composer for hire, Herrmann's unflagging belief in his own opinions about 
music served him as well as his supreme skill at composition and orchestration. 
He once told William S. Paley, the president of CBS for whom he worked for 15 
years starting in 1933: "You're assuming the public is as ignorant about music 
as you."

"He was not a collegial guy," said Mr. Williams, who worked with Herrmann in 
Universal Studios' TV department. "He was contemptuous of a certain kind of 
populism. He had his strong points of vision and had no truck for people he 
felt didn't have integrity in their work. But with me he was very kind."

In 1939, at Welles's insistence, RKO Studios hired Herrmann, who then composed 
the score for "Citizen Kane." In it, Herrmann used two devices that would 
become his signatures—employing leitmotifs to signal the reappearance of a 
narrative thread and writing brief cues to bridge scenes. Herrmann also 
introduced audiences to his affection for ostinato—short, repeated phrases of a 
few notes—a device he would use repeatedly throughout his career.

Herrmann was nominated for an Academy Award for "Kane" and "The Devil and 
Daniel Webster," winning the award for the latter—his sole Oscar. With those 
two works, he established himself as a visionary film composer—with a 
formidable and prickly personality. In 1942, he demanded his name be removed 
from the credits to Welles's "The Magnificent Ambersons" after RKO famously 
re-edited and butchered the film.

In 1955, Herrmann began his relationship with Alfred Hitchcock, scoring "The 
Trouble with Harry," "The Man Who Knew Too Much" (in which he has a cameo as a 
conductor in the climactic scene) and "The Wrong Man." "Vertigo," released in 
1958, contains more than an hour of Herrmann's orchestral music, which 
consistently evokes yearning, tension and moral disarray. With "North by 
Northwest" and "Psycho," his next Hitchcock films, Herrmann crafted two of his 
most iconic scores, the former an orchestral delight that balances comedy and 
suspense, the latter a sparse, macabre work written exclusively for a string 
ensemble. In "Psycho," Hitchcock wanted no music for the memorable shower 
scene, but Herrmann persisted; after hearing the screeching violins as Marion 
Crane (played by Janet Leigh) is slashed and hacked to death, the director 
acquiesced.

In the mid-'60s, Hollywood's conception of what film music should be changed. 
Producers wanted pop hits in the score: A hit soundtrack album could serve as a 
promotional tool. When Hitchcock's "Marnie" disappointed at the box office, 
Universal Studios executives told the director that one reason was Herrmann's 
traditional score.

The shift in taste left Herrmann deeply embittered. "You couldn't spend an 
evening with Benny without his spending half of it in a terrible diatribe 
against one of the young musicians who'd gotten a job," actor-producer John 
Houseman told Herrmann biographer Steven C. Smith in 1984.

Hitchcock hired Herrmann for 1966's "Torn Curtain," but stipulated that the 
composer needed "to break away from the old-fashioned cued-in type of music we 
have been using for so long." The composer agreed to Hitchcock's demands, then 
wrote a score very much in the Herrmann tradition, precipitating a bitter 
quarrel between the two men. Hitchcock dismissed Herrmann, ending a 12-year 
collaboration.

To show what might have been, the "Torn Curtain" DVD includes among its bonus 
materials several scenes with the Herrmann score in place. His opening theme 
suggests a more robust cinematic experience will unfold and his underscoring 
gives the film a gravitas it lacks with John Addison's lighter, more 
contemporary touch.

Though Herrmann wrote a mischievous score for François Truffaut's futuristic 
"Fahrenheit 451" that same year, he was no longer in demand. "Benny was so 
unappreciated here," Mr. Williams said from Hollywood. "He couldn't find work."

But in the early '70s, Herrmann enjoyed a rebirth. A new generation of 
filmmakers understood how Herrmann had enriched the films he scored. Brian 
DePalma hired Herrmann to write the music for his "Sisters," released in 1973. 
In one crucial murder scene, Herrmann uses shrieking horns, strings and 
synthesizers and reintroduces a glockenspiel he'd deployed earlier in the film 
as a symbol of childhood innocence.

Though ill with a heart ailment, Herrmann agreed to score Martin Scorsese's 
"Taxi Driver," using muted trumpets and snare drums to reinforce the sense of a 
dangerous mind careening toward violence. When asked to compose a jazz love 
theme for a scene between a pimp and an underage prostitute, Herrmann turned to 
composer and orchestrator Christopher Palmer for help. Mr. Palmer quoted 
Herrmann's own 1968 musical "The King of Schnorrers" for the haunting piece for 
saxophone and jazz trio.

On Dec. 24, 1975, Herrmann died in his sleep at the Sheraton Universal, which 
is perched above the studio's back lot where the Bates's home in "Psycho" 
stands. He was 64 years old.

With the release of "Taxi Driver," which Mr. Scorsese dedicated to Herrmann, 
the composer's reputation was fully restored. He was nominated for an Oscar for 
both "Taxi Driver" and "Obsession"—Mr. De Palma's "Vertigo"-like film—but he 
didn't win.

"Benny was what you'd expect him to be," Mr. Williams said. "Powerful and 
willful. He put his idiosyncratic spin on everything he did. His lasting 
contribution is not only his film music, but as a single-minded artist who kept 
his seriousness intact. His music, yes. Everybody knows the Alfred Hitchcock 
scores. What's behind that is a strong character that is unyielding. He was a 
unique man."

Mr. Fusilli is the Journal's rock and pop music critic. Email him at 
[email protected] or follow him on Twitter:@wsjrock.

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