UNK SEZ: You guys remember our pal the multi talented DANTE TOMASELLI (Interview HERE). Well, DANTE has just concluded scoring his latest film TORTURE CHAMBER so I asked him what movie scores were his favorites and influenced him the most. Below are his favorite top ten scores alongside some fresh images from his forthcoming film (Check out the official site HERE)! Thanks for sharing this with us Dante, You've got great taste!
1.) HALLOWEEN
I experienced Halloween in theatres at my birthday party in 1979. I just turned 10. My childhood friends were petrified and some of are still traumatized. It's hard to describe the impact of this movie to the younger generation because you really had to experience Halloween in theatres. It had a ferocious grip on audiences. I haven't seen anything match its power. To this day, most critics and fans declare Halloween the ultimate horror film and I wholeheartedly agree. The music is 50% of the film's equation. Halloween's heart-pounding, anxiety-inducing theme is so powerful. It's become the anthem for classic horror films, and definitely something you can't escape around October. I can't escape it. It's been the ringtone on my phone for years. Analogue synthesizer music was popular during the 60's and 70's in sci-fi and horror films but Halloween took that kind of sound design to a whole new level. This is a landmark horror soundtrack. Flickering and glowing like a devilish jack-o-lantern, the music is sinister and playfully evil. I'm forever influenced by this motion picture and its soundtrack. Thank you, John Carpenter.
2.) SUSPIRIA
I saw this film in my late twenties, during post production of my first feature, Desecration. How did I not ever see it? I remember the commercial on TV when I was 7-years-old. There was a seductive woman brushing her hair…her back to the camera. We hear her child-like voice. Roses are red. Violets are blue…She's telling a poem. She swings around. Her face is a skull. Then a man's voice says, 'You can run from Suspiria…but you cannot escape…Suspiria.' It was a whispery, evil voice…S-U-S-P-I-R-I-A. Somehow, where I lived in New Jersey, Suspiria wasn't distributed. Eventually, though, I do remember seeing the title in video stores, and oddly ignoring it. I guess I was in my own fog at the time. When I finally watched the film, I felt like it was a religious experience. The same feeling I got while watching The House with Laughing Windows. It's the kind of movie that must be properly viewed at night, in darkness, in stereo. Any other way diminishes it. The music by Goblin is so dense and multi-layered. Synthesizers, rhythm guitars, real instruments, all kinds of drums. You can get lost in its labyrinth design. Especially the beginning of the Suspiria theme. It starts off with a child's lullaby, actually beautiful and soft but then these obscene whispers crash in and the drum beats more insistent.
3.) THE FOG
My mother and I saw The Fog in theatres in 1980. I was 10. We were already fans of Carpenter's Halloween. The theatre was called Totowa Cinema on Route 46 in Totowa, New Jersey. My father owned a Jewelry and Bridal Store in the mall where the movie played. I remember my mother was slightly disappointed by The Fog, I guess because she was comparing it to Halloween, but I absolutely loved the film. Everything about it. I was electrified. I was completely obsessed with the images and sounds and murky ghost storyline. The Fog. I'd illustrate the title, in its own special font on my grammar school notebooks. I always loved typography. The music in this film totally jumped out at me…just like Halloween…and there's a mysterious knocking at the door. TAP. TAP. TAP. TAP. I used to mimic that all the time on different doors….There was a wood burning stove in our garage and I used the stoker to strike the door, pretending I was one of the ghouls. Around this time, I played an electronic organ. I'd sit home and fantasize. Low tones. Also, I played the pounding beat on electronic drums in my basement. I'd pound the drums, in a trance, over and over. It's that section of the film where the fog is chasing everyone through the streets. Ahhhh. I love that. Nothing beats the Moog synthesizer analogue soundscape. It just pushes my button. When I purchased the soundtrack to The Fog I listened to it non-stop. You get the feeling that something is chasing you…and it's coming closer and closer….The film has state-of-the-art moody electronic sound design.
4.) HALLOWEEN III: SEASON OF THE WITCH
It was 1982. I was 12 and I couldn't wait for its release. The commercials on TV were striking with a spider crawling out of an old hag's mouth accompanied by nightmarish music. I was so excited. The Night No one Comes Home. Perfect tag line. Then I saw the film. I already read the tie-in book, so I knew what to expect…Robots. I liked the film but didn't love it. Still, I admired its fresh approach and loved its Dean Cundey widescreen cinematography. Mostly, mainly, I was ecstatic about the music. What perfect electronic horror music! I bought the album and listened to it endlessly. I still do. While nothing beats the theme to the original, overall as an album, this is definitely a better listening experience…and with the widest selection of doom-laced worlds. To me, it sounds like it would be a very dark solo album from Greg Hawkes, the imaginative keyboardist from The Cars. For example, Drive to Santa Mira…it has the distinct John Carpenter low toned vibe while incorporating a new dreamy organ with lots of reverb. Every single track stands out as an example of haunting mood music. John Carpenter and Alan Howarth created magic here. This is synth horror heaven and should probably be number one on my list. I could just listen to Halloween 3: Season of the Witch until the end of time.
5.) SOUNDS TO MAKE YOU SHIVER
This is actually not a movie but a horror sound fx album. It was played around Halloween in the 70's and 80's…and in many different funhouses as background music. Halloween was every day for me, so I'd listen to Sounds to Make You Shiver all the time, especially from 1st to 6th grade. The album consists mainly of moans and screams and thunderstorms. First we hear a woman groaning in pain and a man sadistically laughing with a chain clanging in the background. You feel like you're in a dungeon. I got lost in the howling wind and thunderstorms and creepy, thick atmospheres. In a trance, I would listen…My imagination lighting up. Side 2 has variations of screams, witches cackles, cats, growling dogs and more moody and violent storms. Midway through, the sounds morph into an ambient, almost experimental piece with dreamy piano, guitar and bells…mixed with echoed footsteps…and a chain dragging on a castle floor.
6.) THE SHINING
At times you can hear devils giggling. I used to scare my younger brother just by playing the music. This spine-tingling score by Wendy Carlos, a pioneer in electronic music, has an almost demonic power. I swear it's transmitted straight from hell. The opening theme is expertly constructed…so delicately woven…It's bone-chilling. Atmospheric, psychedelic, macabre and surreal…It floats on another plane. There is nothing like this Moog synthesizer music, it creates its own space. I love Wendy's score for A Clockwork Orange too. Her sound is so otherworldly….
7.) ALICE, SWEET ALICE
My cousin, Alfred Sole's film, doesn't have a soundtrack that's released and it should. Stephen Lawrence conjures one of the most dreamily sinister themes I've ever heard. I'm referring to the sparkling lullaby mixed with the menacing tones and breathy vocals. It's cold and sleek and evil as can be, just like the movie. The swirling violins are unnerving and in-your-face. I love all the small interludes with haunted piano and reverb. The opening titles music is surprisingly reserved and reminds me of a warped version of The Godfather. Very Italian…family tragedy….On the DVD copies, you can find a montage of the film's old stills…and the music playing over these images is the breathy, ice-cold theme to Alice, Sweet Alice…extended. I loop it over and over….
8.) SCANNERS
Howard Shore scored The Brood and Videodrome, also favorites. He's an expert in somber, deadly serious soundscapes. You don't just hear them, you feel them. The trancelike electronic music here is percolating, staccato, moaning in pain. He captures emotional violence. In fact, my first short film was called Emotional Violence. It got me into Pratt Institute, the film department. It was a non-linear montage about a suicidal girl with an abusive boyfriend and mother. My mother, an actress, played the mother. I had Scanners music throughout. How could I resist? I know I could never sell it. I can't find the film now.
9.) THE THING
This soundtrack reminds me of being in high school and listening to the cassette on my walkman. I'd get completely lost in this gorgeous, classy horror music. It's amazing how Ennio Morricone was channeling John Carpenter, intentionally or not. Sometimes it really sounds like him. I love Morricone's The Bird with the Crystal Plumage too. That should be on this top 10 list. The Thing's theme, with its pulsating electronic tone, is genuinely hypnotic. I can play it over and over and over. There's something off-kilter, almost avant garde in its repetitiveness. It's minimalist. But not all of the soundtrack is like that. There are violin compositions that are spacious, warm, lush and eerie. There are also some screeching violins that are all-out terrifying.
10.) CHRISTINE
Cold and pristine, John Carpenter's Christine score is embedded in my psyche. Just like the soundtracks to Halloween, Halloween 2, Halloween 3, The Fog and Prince of Darkness, Christine has been a part of my life for as long as I can remember. A bit clipped, which makes for a jumpy listening experience. But it's not really meant to stand on its own, even though it does. John Carpenter is all about scoring to picture. It's thin and glacial and it works. The throbbing baritone employed throughout is pure old-school Carpenter. I love it. The scene where Arnie says, 'Show me' and that electronic bell pierces through the atmosphere…followed by the galloping low tone…cinematic magic. It takes my breath away and sometimes brings a tear to my eye. I'm in awe of the way the music changes the environment, how it completely elevates and transforms the scene. The chase compositions are melodic. There's that propulsive beat that feels like all early Carpenter themes wrapped into one.
I love this article. These wonderful observations could have been made by my teen horror geek self, listening to horror soundtrack lp's in my bedroom. Glad to know I wasn't the ony one!
Dante,
I'm so glad you brought up Howard Shore. Sometimes I forget how great he is…
All of his collaborations with Cronenberg are outstanding and the other day Silence of The Lambs was on and I was marveling at how perfect the music was during the opening credits.
Ratsawgod,
I know what you mean I still have a bunch of these on ancient Cassette tapes!
I even used to record soundtrack music right off the TV and then play it back on my Walkman.
Fantastic article. I'm a huge fan of the old soundtracks/scores and I'd say that at least 4 of these selections are on my top 10 as well. "Halloween III" and "Christine" are sooo damn good.
Uncle Lancifer: Yeah that Silence of the Lamb score is great. I'm listening to the opening credits now. Not to self promote, but when I see people get excited about soundtracks I must share my blog's URL, http://sideshowcinema.blogspot.com/ I'm a shameless bastard! ha
Pretty cool, considering I already have 6 of those on one of my YouTube playlists. I've always been a fan of soundtrack music, ESPECIALLY horror. Nice to know that there are other people out there with great taste like me! 😉
Such a great list! I love a lot of these! I'm also a huge fan of Goblin's Bio Omega and, believe it or not, Fatal Frames.
Oh yeah, and the Card Player. Wow. Good stuff.
And although it's not typical horror, I'd put the Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me Soundtrack on my list. So creepy and wonderful.
I'm sooooo looking forward to Torture Chamber. Can't wait!
If I may add….I watched the new Fright Night the other day and was reminded of how cool the original movie's score was. So 80's with the synth's, but oh so compelling. Boy do I miss the good old days…
Great Article… I loved every one of these soundtracks growing up as a kid.
Living in a small town I would special order many of these on cassette tape from the local electronics shop that sold VCR's and Stereos.
The first horror film music to blow my mind was the Halloween soundtrack, the other was the Amityville horror theme.