Bernard Hermann: Psycho:
The Bathroom
The Murder
A friend told us a story of this music suddenly being played in a bookshop he was in and, all of a sudden, all the customers wanted to leave – immediately. The customers weren’t sure why, but they wanted to be elsewhere. The incessant violin bow strokes don’t leave you a chance to get even your last breath.
Horror doesn’t only happened in the household – it also has a long career in space, with everything from the ominous music begun in the cellos in Arthur Bliss’ music for Things to Come,
Arthur Bliss: Things to Come, IV: Attack
to the slow winding down of HAL the computer as he sings “Daisy,” the effect heightened by the cicada-like electronic sound above it
2010: A Space Odyssey: HAL 9000 Sings “Daisy”
Akira Ifukube: Godzilla, King of the Monsters: Main title theme
In his music for the 1985 remake of Godzilla, Rejiro Koroku makes it clear from the beginning that this is horror music: the low held note, the tragic trumpet lines, the abrupt breaking melodic lines, and even when a tiny high melody comes in, there are still shivering strings below.
Rejiro Koroku: Godzilla 1985: Main title
All three elements come together in all these examples to scare us: low resonant tones, high frightening violins, and sharp percussion.