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Torn Curtain

 
Album Review: Torn Curtain

  • Artist: John Addison
  • Rating: StarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1978
  • Total Time: 29:15
  • Type: Soundtrack
  • Genre: Soundtrack

Review

Alfred Hitchcock's film Torn Curtain had two scores written, but only one was used. The music heard in the film was written by John Addison, but an alternate score by famed cinematic composer Bernard Herrmann has also been released thrice on CD. The legend of the scores is that Herrmann refused to craft his composition toward the director's and studio's preferred pop direction. After an amazing nine efforts, Hitchcock and Herrmann parted ways after collaborating on some of the most famous soundtrack music of all time, including those for Psycho, Vertigo, and North by Northwest. The two never worked together again. The Addison version is about half as long, probably due to resultant time constraints. "Main Title" is sweeping with some jazzy hints while "Love Theme" sounds like most upbeat romantic cues of the time. Whereas Herrmann's unused score has moody and paranoid undertones throughout (as befitting a 1966 Cold War drama), Addison's only occasionally repeats those darker motifs. Herrmann's, with so many more cues and subsidiary pieces, provided a much deeper musical experience. So soundtrack fans are presented with a wonderful debate: Which score is better? The used is reflective of the time, but the unused has cache, a lot more music, and a challenging missive. While Addison used melody to propel the story ahead, Herrmann chose to forgo Hollywood's melodic conventions to further a brooding mood. The soundtrack to Torn Curtain shows that the tensions between producers and artists is universal and that the corporate needs with regard to film music are probably as old as film itself. Like with Orson Welles' unsuccessful struggle to make The Lady From Shanghai (and its music) more alienating and frightful, Bernard Herrmann was unsuccessful in forcing his musical vision upon Hitchcock. The used score is undeniably lesser, but also a good piece of work. The released Torn Curtain employed the use of silence, which made for an interesting artistic choice forged out of necessity. The two scores together make for an interesting history lesson for the students of film music. ~ JT Griffith, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Main Title John Addison John Addison (2:15)
The Love Theme John Addison John Addison (3:02)
Behind the Curtain John Addison John Addison (2:16)
Introduction To John Addison John Addison (2:17)
Preminitions of Trouble John Addison John Addison (3:20)
Variations on the Love Theme John Addison John Addison (1:16)
Bus Theme Variations John Addison John Addison (1:18)
Sarah Alone John Addison John Addison (1:30)
The Murder of Gromek John Addison John Addison (2:40)
Michael and Sarah-Alone on the Hill John Addison John Addison (1:21)
Escape on the Bus John Addison John Addison (4:03)
End Title John Addison Ray Evans, Jay Livingston (3:57)

Credits

Ray Evans (Performer), Tom Null (Production Supervisor), John Addison (Composer), Bernard Herrmann (Performer), Royal Philharmonic Orchestra (?), Robert Townson (Executive Producer), Jay Livingston (Performer), Bernard Herrmann (Composer), Charles Bud Dant (Producer), Keith Grant (Engineer), Kevin Mulhall (Liner Note Art), John Addison (Conductor), Elmer Bernstein (Conductor), Alfred Hitchcock (Director)
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Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more

 

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