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FSM releases Bernard Herrmann's It's Alive


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#1 Miles Prower

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Posted 05 March 2012 - 06:16 PM

http://www.screenarc...7434/ITS-ALIVE/

The first half of the 1970s witnessed a magnificent resurgence for one of Hollywood’s legendary composers: Bernard Herrmann. Living in England, the notoriously cantankerous Herrmann—a near-pariah within the Hollywood establishment—suddenly became the darling of young directors like Martin Scorsese, Brian de Palma and Larry Cohen.
Cohen wrote, produced and directed It’s Alive near the beginning of a storied career as a high-end exploitation filmmaker. Although his plans to reunite the two principal actors from Psycho for his film about a mutant killer infant came to naught (John Ryan and Sharon Farrell instead played the hapless parents), he did manage to hire the composer of the iconic score for the Hitchcock classic.

Herrmann’s score for It’s Alive represents the epitome of his succinct style. The music evolves from short, mostly conjunct motives (usually only 2–5 notes), repeated sequentially. There is little in the way of extended melody. The orchestration is also typical for Herrmann: an unusual ensemble consisting of 6 clarinets, 8 French horns, 6 trumpets, 6 trombones, 2 tubas, 2 harps, Moog synthesizer, electric bass guitar, organ and percussion. The only string instrument is a solo viola d’amore, a Baroque-era instrument that the composer previously used for On Dangerous Ground and one of his Twilight Zone episode scores.

This CD features the premiere release of Herrmann’s nearly complete score (only one five-second cue is missing), mastered from a set of ¼″ monaural tapes in the Warner Bros. vaults. (No stereo masters survive.) FSM’s 16-page booklet, designed by Joe Sikoryak, includes a detailed, perceptive essay on film and score by Jeff Bond and Frank K. DeWald.

The film’s tag line reads: “There is only one thing wrong with the Davis baby. It’s alive.” The only thing “wrong” with this CD is that it took 37 years to bring Bernard Herrmann’s third-to-last score to the public. FSM is happy to correct this oversight as a final tribute to the composer at the end of his centennial celebration.


SWEET. I love this score. :D
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#2 Omen II

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Posted 05 March 2012 - 08:17 PM

Good news! I watched this movie a couple of years ago and it is so daft, but in an enjoyably hokey way. It ends with a great last line:

"Another one's just been born in Seattle."


I also love the fact that Bernard Herrmann, who is more famous for his bad temper than his wicked sense of humour, called the cue where the evil baby attacks a milk float The Milkman Goeth.

:lol:
His mouth is full of bees!

#3 Richard

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Posted 06 March 2012 - 09:41 AM

Thanks for that, Mr. Movies (I suspect not your real name); any Herrmann is worth listening to. He went way too soon...

Nice avatar, btw; what do you think of "A Map Of The Floating City?




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