Film Music Review
The Sammy awards
 
 
 

 

 
   
   

 

 

 

Hollywood Halloween

 

 

 

There are many scores that could be chosen for Halloween
from Hollywood films between the 1930s and 1980s.

For this list, it was decided to select just five film scores
chosen by Film Music Review critics:



 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Selected by Roger L. Hall


 

There are so many to choose from that it is difficult to choose just a few Hollywood film scores. For my selections I chose one classic Universal film that Steve didn't pick, also a '40s film-noir classic, plus film scores from three film music masters: Bernard Herrmann, Jerry Goldsmith and John Williams. They are some of my favorites for Halloween and other times too.

 

 

SON OF FRANKENSTEIN (1939)

This score by Frank Skinner assisted by Hans J. Salter features many of the themes that were re-used in Universal horror films of the early 1940s, especially for the various Mummy films. This third and last in the Frankenstein trilogy with Boris Karloff is always fun to watch and the score is also outstanding.

 

 

 

The Devil & Daniel Webster (The Criterion Collection)

THE DEVIL AND DANIEL WEBSTER (original title: ALL THAT MONEY CAN BUY,1941) -

I think that this is one of Bernard Herrmann's best Americana scores and he richly received his Oscar for Best Film Score of 1941. There are plenty of scary cues in it, especially "Mr Scratch" and "The Miser's Waltz."

 

 

Roy Webb

CAT PEOPLE (1942)

My favorite film-noir horror film of the 1940s. It just reeks with dark menace and has a seductive score by the vastly underrated Roy Webb, who worked on so many fine films at RKO, including most of the great Val Lewton horror classics, like the ones included on the excellent Marco Polo CD, with brilliant score reconstructions are by John Morgan and the orchestra is conducted with great sensitivity by William T. Stromberg.

Roy Webb was chosen for a Lifetime Achievement Sammy Film Music Award -- click here

 

 

 

Dracula: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack

DRACULA (1979)

Even though this is not the best known or best liked of the many outstanding scores by John Williams, for me it remains a favorite of his '70s scores. The film features a different slant, with Frank Langella playing a more tormented Count Dracula. In his DVD interview, Langella is very complimentary about Williams saying: "It remains a beautiful haunting memorable score." Williams says on his segment of the DVD: "A wonderful subject for music...The magnetism of the unknown mixed with the erotic aspects of the story made it for me a very romantic piece in many ways."

 

POLTERGEIST (1982)

Jerry Goldsmith fully deserved his Oscar for THE OMEN, but he should have also received one for his superb POLTERGEIST score, featuring a delightfully subtle children's theme along with the usual sinister type of modernistic music found in so many horror films of recent decades. This is one of Goldsmith's great scores of the 1980s.

 

 

 

 


Selected by Steven A. Kennedy

 


 

 

When it comes to music for Halloween, my mind always turns to the music for the great Universal horror films of the 1940s.  The music by Hans Salter and Frank Skinner accompanied many of my late night movie watching and Saturday “chiller” theater matinees growing up.  These were often offset by the body of work James Bernard provided for the Hammer horror films of the 1960s and the many cheaply made Horror films of the 1950s and 1960s scored by the great Gerald Fried. 

Difficult to select from over several decades of music, but here's my suggested listening...

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Bride Of Frankenstein (1993 Rerecording Of 1935 Film Score)

 

THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN (1935)

Though this film is more a drama with macabre elements, Waxman’s music for the scene where the Bride comes to life is simply some of the best film music of the decade.  The theremin theme that helps cement everything together was also no doubt creepy to this film’s first audience.  The other thing is that a lot of Waxman’s score was pasted in to future Universal pictures into the next two decades.

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

THE WOLF MAN (1941)

Hard to pick just one great Universal film in this decade but this score has a little of everything.  The infamous lines of how to beware when the wolfsbane blooms is wonderful alongside the various gypsy dance scenes.  But it is in some of the chase sequences that the score also works well.  This one was co-composed by Charles Previn, Frank Skinner, and Hans Salter and the latter would provide music for the Frankenstein and Invisible Man franchises in addition to later Wolf Man films.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thing From Another World & Take the High C

 

 

THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD (1951)

Tiomkin’s score, recently available from Film Score Monthly, is another of those classic film scores.  Here it is as much about when music is not in the film as when it is and the creepy music and dramatic underscore that builds tension help make this one of the great sci-fi horror classics.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Omen: Original Motion Picture Score (Deluxe Edition)

 

THE OMEN (1976)

Goldsmith’s music for the OMEN TRILOGY helps chill your blood any day.  The initial Oscar winning score is an amazing accomplishment mixing horror movie writing into traditional dramatic underscoring.  That is what makes it a masterpiece and sets it apart even from its successors, though THE FINAL CONFLICT is close to being an equally accomplished score.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ghost Story

GHOST STORY (1981)

Probably my most surprising choice, but I always loved this film.  It has a great cast, an engaging story and some scenes still make you jump.  Sarde’s score is filled with a gothic horror music sound complete with a rhythmic piano idea that itself sounds skittish coupled with bells and even a little organ.

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ideal for teaching, research
or for any film music collector...

New edition now available!

A GUIDE TO FILM MUSIC: Songs and Scores (8th edition, 2022)

 

 


 

 

 

 



 

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