Free-Reprint Article Written by: K T  Ong 
See Terms of Reprint Below.

*****************************************************************
*
* This email is being delivered directly to members of the group:
* 
*    [email protected]
* 
*****************************************************************


We have moved our TERMS OF REPRINT to the end of the article.
Be certain to read our TERMS OF REPRINT and honor our TERMS 
OF REPRINT when you use this article. Thank you.

This article has been distributed by:
http://Article-Distribution.com

Helpful Link: 
  The Digital Millennium Copyright Act - Overview
  http://www.gseis.ucla.edu/iclp/dmca1.htm

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Article Title:
==============

Horror Music: 20th-Century Classical Works Expressing the Emotion of Fear

Article Description:
====================

A good deal of music may have been composed to be employed as
background music for horror movies, but there are also a
significant number of works which stand on their own like a good
horror novel in the form of music.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

1126 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-03-06 11:36:00

Written By:     K T  Ong
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



For more free-reprint articles by K T  Ong, please visit:
http://thePhantomWriters.com/free_content/d/index.shtml#K_T_Ong


=============================================
Special Notice For Publishers and Webmasters:
=============================================

If you use this article on your website or in your ezine,
We Want To Know About It. Use the following URL to let
us know where you have used this article, and we will
include a link to your website on thePhantomWriters.com: 

http://thephantomwriters.com/notify.php?id=4299&p=load


HTML Copy-and-Paste and TEXT Copy-and-Paste 
Versions Of Article Are Available at:
http://thePhantomWriters.com/free_content/db/o/horror-music.shtml#get_code

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Horror Music: 20th-Century Classical Works Expressing the Emotion of Fear
Copyright (c) 2007 K T  Ong
Mall of Cthulhu
http://www.mallofcthulhu.com



The emotion of horror does not seem to have been explored to any
great extent by Western composers before the Twentieth Century.
(I really don't think Bach's overused "Toccata and Fugue in D
Minor" was intended to convey that emotion. :)) A good deal of
music of this nature may have been composed to be employed as
background music for horror movies, but there are also a
significant number of works which stand on their own like a good
horror novel in the form of music.

Horror can take many forms; not all horror has to do with the
supernatural and the macabre. Horror can be quiet and creepy, or
can involve direct and brutal impacts on the senses. One can also
speak of apocalyptic horror, the horror expressed through visions
of vast cataclysms and upheavals.

"Prometheus" by Alexander Scriabin provides one example of such
visions of apocalypse. This highly dramatic 20-minute symphonic
poem for piano and orchestra evokes visions of vast, colossal
changes (though at times it is also gentle and lyrical); films
like "Volcano", "Dante's Peak" and "Aftershock" would have
done well to employ portions of this work as soundtrack music.
Scriabin was known to seriously entertain crazy, far-fetched
ideas about using special means to transform the entire world and
lift all of humanity into some higher state with the power of his
music!

Another example of music explicitly intended to portray the
forces of Nature in their more terrifying aspects would be "La
Mer" (The Sea) by Claude Debussy, an orchestral suite in three
movements. The third movement, 'Dialogue du vent et de la mer'
(Dialogue of the Wind and the Sea), paints a sinister picture of
threatening storm clouds gathering over a darkened and
increasingly restless sea. If you missed the film "The Perfect
Storm", this might be a good substitute!

'Cloudburst' from Ferde Grofé's "Grand Canyon Suite"
provides yet another musical portrayal of the fury of the
elements, though it sort of lacks Debussy's finesse. The
depiction of a storm building up in the Grand Canyon is highly
suspenseful in this piece.

"The Song of the Night" by Karol Szymanowski shares some
similarities with Scriabin's "Prometheus" - the mysterious
wordless chorus, the use of the piano, the climactic organ - but
is perhaps more subtle in its approach. In this very slow work
(which lasts slightly longer than 20 minutes), fear is sublimated
into awe and wonder as one is confronted with the breathtaking
beauty and splendor of the Persian night. The chilling warning
'not to go to sleep this night', delivered by the tenor solo at
the beginning of the work, slowly gives way to warm, lyrical
passages tinged with Oriental flavorings, and at times reaches
heights of pure rapture. The warning is now understood not to be
given lest we encounter something terrible, but lest we miss out
on something wonderful!

Not many of the works of Twentieth-Century Western classical
music which seek to express the emotions of fear and horror
explicitly take the supernatural and the macabre as their
subject, both being favorite motifs in horror literature as
opposed to music. One such work would be the 30-minute ballet
"The Miraculous Mandarin" by Béla Bartók, perhaps one of the
most truly terrifying works in the classical repertoire. With
shrieking strings, extended trombone glissandi and a chilling
wordless chorus towards the end, the bloodcurdling work relates
the tale of a beautiful prostitute employed by three robbers as
bait for unsuspecting men who were promptly killed and stripped
of their possessions. One of the victims, a wealthy Chinaman,
returned repeatedly from the dead despite every effort of the
robbers; it turned out that he was so greatly aroused by the
prostitute the power of his lust sustained him beyond the grave!

Horror can be in the eye of the beholder; to early man the whole
world might have been a pretty scary place, with supernatural
beings lurking in every aspect of creation and demanding their
dues in the form of sacrifices. This was what Igor Stravinsky
imagined and sought to express in his "Le Sacre du Primtemps"
(The Rite of Spring), one of Bartók's apparent sources of
inspiration. Quiet and uneasy moments alternate in this piece
with explosions of violence and savagery. Even more extreme and
frenzied in their savagery are 'Mars, the Bringer of War' from
"The Planets" by Gustav Holst and the first four minutes of
"Feste Romane" (Roman Festivals) by Ottorino Respighi, which
depict the orgies of the Circus Maximus. You have been warned.
:)

Harrison Birtwistle's slightly-hard-to-find "Triumph of Time"
would have to be one of the most recent pieces to be introduced
in this article, being composed in the 1970's. The slow, quiet
and eerie music of this 30-minute orchestral work depicts the
relentless procession of time, the unrelieved gloom punctuated at
times by rude eruptions which would shock the listener off her
seat. The whole work is almost like an immense musical
grindstone, slowly grinding all into dust. Not even 'Saturn, the
Bringer of Old Age' from Holst's "The Planets" can rival this
work in terms of the sheer desolation of its vision.

Not all scary music is based on an explicit story or idea, or
meant to be. Ralph Vaughan Williams' harrowing "4th" and "6th
Symphonies" have often been related to the horrors and
brutalities of war (Vaughan Williams himself served in the army
for a time), yet he emphatically denied any such connotations,
insisting on an understanding of them as 'pure' music - an
assertion many have found unconvincing. The second movement in
each of these two works generates a powerful sense of mounting
terror. The final movement of the "6th Symphony" in particular,
with its slow, gloomy and tired passages, has been thought of by
commentators as a musical portrayal of a world left lifeless by
nuclear warfare, with aimless clouds drifting across barren
wastelands.

Some scary music actually ends happily. Arnold Schoenberg's
"Transfigured Night", a 30-minute work composed purely for
strings, relates the story of two lovers meeting in a wood at
night when the woman begins to reveal her dark and terrible
secrets, mainly that she is pregnant with the child of another.
The fearful anticipation of the man's likely response is vividly
portrayed in Schoenberg's music; those who listen to this piece
with no knowledge of the underlying story can probably be
forgiven for thinking of a Dracula movie soundtrack. :). Much to
the poor woman's relief - and the listener's as well - the man
dispels her fears with a magnanimous gesture of forgiveness
towards the middle of the work, and accepts the child as his own;
the music accordingly becomes warm and romantic, the coda calm
and happy as the two walk into the 'high, bright night'...




---------------------------------------------------------------------
K T Ong lives in Singapore and is currently pursuing 
a PhD at the National University of Singapore. He 
loves art, music, books, toys and PC games, and 
is also trying to develop a figure like that 
of Steve Reeves. :p You might like to visit 
his Mall of Cthulhu (http://www.mallofcthulhu.com), 
a great treasury of lovely infoproducts.




--- END ARTICLE ---

Get HTML or TEXT Copy-and-Paste Versions Of This Article at:
http://thePhantomWriters.com/free_content/db/o/horror-music.shtml#get_code



.....................................

TERMS OF REPRINT - Publication Rules 
(Last Updated:  May 11, 2006)

Our TERMS OF REPRINT are fully enforcable under the terms of:

  The Digital Millennium Copyright Act
  http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c105:H.R.2281.ENR:

.....................................

*** Digital Reprint Rights ***

* If you publish this article in a website/forum/blog, 
  You Must Set All URL's or Mailto Addresses in the body 
  of the article AND in the Author's Resource Box as
  Hyperlinks (clickable links).

* Links must remain in the form that we published them.
  Clean links should point to the Author's links without
  redirects having been inserted into the copy.

* You are not allowed to Change or Delete any Words or 
  Links in the Article or Resource Box. Paragraph breaks 
  must be retained with articles. You can change where
  the paragraph breaks fall, but you cannot eliminate all
  paragraph breaks as some have chosen to do.

* Email Distribution of this article Must be done through
  Opt-in Email Only. No Unsolicited Commercial Email.


* You Are Allowed to format the layout of the article for 
  proper display of the article in your website or in your 
  ezine, so long as you can maintain the author's interests 
  within the article.

* You may not use sentences from this article as an input
  for any software that steals sentences from others in 
  order to build an article with software. The copyright on
  this article applies to the "WHOLE" article.


*** Author Notification ***

  We ask that you notify the author of publication of his
  or her work. K T  Ong can be reached at:
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]


*** Print Publication Reprint Rights ***

  If you desire to publish this article in a PRINT 
  publication, you must contact the author directly 
  for Print Permission at:  
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



.....................................

If you need help converting this text article for proper 
hyperlinked placement in your webpage, please use this 
free tool:  http://thephantomwriters.com/link-builder.pl



=====================================================================

ABOUT THIS ARTICLE SUBMISSION

http://thePhantomWriters.com is a paid article distribution 
service. thePhantomWriters.com and Article-Distribution.com 
are owned and operated by Bill Platt of Stillwater, Oklahoma USA.

The content of this article is solely the property 
and opinion of its author, K T  Ong
http://www.mallofcthulhu.com



---------------------------------------------------------------------
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
---------------------------------------------------------------------







------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
See what's inside the new Yahoo! Groups email.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/0It09A/bOaOAA/yQLSAA/FGnolB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*

To have your article appear in this distribution list,
you must absolutely be a client of thePhantomWriters.

We offer a paid article distribution service, and this
is one of the more than 60 groups where we submit our
client articles. To learn more about our program, visit:

http://thePhantomWriters.com/x.pl/tpw/index.htm 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/thePhantomWriters/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/thePhantomWriters/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Reply via email to