So I was driving around the other day, listening to the radio, when Beethoven's 4th came on. Rarely do I listen to the radio when I'm in the car, but on those rare occasions when I grow bored with my CDs, I listen to one station and one station only: the local classical channel (everything else is Christian or worse, country). The DJ paraphrased a description of Beethoven's fourth symphony as a Greek goddess sandwiched between two Norse gods, and as the music played, I thought on what she said. Beethoven wrote a lot of powerful and evocative music; when John McTiernan was making
Die Hard, he'd heard the Ode to Joy, and insisted the music act as a kind of leitmotif for Hans Grueber. The music spoke to McTiernan (who didn't actually know what he was hearing) and he turned around and used it to speak to his audience, communicating Grueber's desire.
The Ode to Joy is, as it's name suggests, a joyful and triumphant piece of music. The first movement of Beethoven's fifth, on the other hand, is both light and dark and its first four notes might be the most well known in history. And then there are compositions that are just dark. Horror is not, nor has it ever been, confined to words and pictures, and music can evoke moods and feelings that are sometimes out of reach of other artists. I've here listed four musical numbers that conjure the darkness:
Berlioz - Symphonie Fantastique, Dream of a Witch's Sabbath
3 comments:
DM you have a Great ear for music I am very impressed! Once again thank you for sharing you amazing insight.
Excellent post. The Orff piece was, for a while, THE go-to piece of music for action/horror/fantasy movie trailers. It still gives me chills.
What qualities does the Ode to Joy possess, according to the article, and how do these qualities align with its name? Visit us Retrieving data. Wait a few seconds and try to cut or copy again.
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