Tag: Elmer Bernstein

  • Spooky Movie Soundtracks for Halloween

    Spooky Movie Soundtracks for Halloween

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” for Halloween, keep your spirits up – quite literally – with selections from cinematic ghost stories.

    Ray Milland and Ruth Hussey play a London music critic and his sister, respectively, who purchase a desolate house along the Cornish coast, in “The Uninvited” (1944). There, they encounter chilling spectral manifestations and a kind of possession, in which the daughter of the former inhabitants struggles against self-destructive impulses.

    Milland provides so much levity at times that it seems almost as if he’s in another picture, but the moody atmosphere, eerie special effects, and expert pacing deliver. Also, the film features Cornelia Otis Skinner as the malevolent director of a sanatorium, whose character provides an interesting subtext.
    It remains one of the best haunted house films ever made. Victor Young’s score yielded the popular standard, “Stella by Starlight.”

    Michael Keaton is given license to run amok in fright makeup, in Tim Burton’s haunted house comedy “Beetlejuice” (1988), a film that also stars Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis. Danny Elfman’s score betrays the usual Nino Rota influence, in this case tempered by a little Stravinskyian fiddle music and some clarinet licks straight out of Raymond Scott. (Think “Powerhouse.”)

    “Poltergeist” (1982) is, at times, more of a rollercoaster ride than a haunted house film, in the classic sense. Still, despite an over-reliance on special effects, it manages to achieve one or two moments of classic Spielbergian awe. It was Steven Spielberg’s first project as a producer, and released only a week before his masterpiece, “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial.” Jerry Goldsmith wrote the music, and I think we can all agree, there’s nothing creepier than laughing children.

    Though “Poltergeist” turned out to be one of the highest-grossing films of 1982, its profits were dwarfed by those of a ghostly comedy from two years later. “Ghostbusters” (1984) was like a license to print money. Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, and Harold Ramis play a trio of parapsychologists who don jumpsuits and use high-tech vacuum cleaners to rid New York City of supernatural threats. The team’s off-beat chemistry does much to contribute to the film’s genial goofiness.

    Everyone remembers the pop song (“Who you gonna call?”), but few remember Elmer Bernstein’s orchestral underscore. At this stage of his career, Bernstein – who wrote music for such classics as “The Ten Commandments,” “The Magnificent Seven,” and “To Kill a Mockingbird” – had become associated with comedy, thanks to the success of films like “Animal House,” “Airplane,” and “Stripes.” The score to “Ghostbusters” is notable for its use of the ondes Martenot, an electronic keyboard instrument that sounds an awful lot like the theremin, and also the Yamaha D-X7 synthesizer.
    The bridge is out… you’ll have to spend the night. Steel your nerves for music from cinematic ghost stories, this Saturday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org!


    Trick or treat! And THANK YOU to everyone who contributed to WWFM’s fall membership campaign. It’s because of listeners like you that The Classical Network is able to bring you homegrown specialty shows like “Picture Perfect.” If you haven’t had a chance to contribute and have been meaning to do so, you can still make your donation online at wwfm.org. Thanks again, and happy Halloween!

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  • Elmer Bernstein Western Film Scores

    Elmer Bernstein Western Film Scores

    “Fill your hands, you son of a b****!”

    Western film scores of Elmer Bernstein, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, this Friday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Magnificent Seven Elmer Bernstein Scores

    Magnificent Seven Elmer Bernstein Scores

    Chris (Brynner): You forget one thing. We took a contract.
    Vin (McQueen): It’s sure not the kind any court would enforce.
    Chris: That’s just the kind you’ve got to keep.

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” saddle up with seven magnificent western film scores by Elmer Bernstein – including selections from “The Comancheros,” “The Shootist,” “The Sons of Katie Elder,” “True Grit,” “Wild Wild West,” “The Hallelujah Trail,” and of course “The Magnificent Seven.”

    One never had to worry about social distancing in the Old West. It’s high-spirited music for wide-open spaces, this Friday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Elmer Bernstein East Meets West

    Elmer Bernstein East Meets West

    No relation to Leonard Bernstein (or “Bern-STINE”), Elmer pronounced his surname “Bern-STEEN.” In the interest of clarity, the two were sometimes further differentiated as “East Coast Bernstein” and “West Coast Bernstein.” In this photo, we have a rare instance of East meets West.

  • Elmer Bernstein A Cinematic Promised Land

    Elmer Bernstein A Cinematic Promised Land

    With Passover only days away, simply remembering Elmer Bernstein leads me back through a wilderness of mediocrity that today passes for film music, to a Promised Land of cinematic milk and honey.

    Over the course of an enviable career that spanned some 50 years, Bernstein composed music for dozens of movies, many of them still much-beloved, including “The Ten Commandments” (1956), “The Magnificent Seven” (1960), “To Kill a Mockingbird” (1962), and “The Great Escape” (1963).

    In addition, he was one of the first film composers to incorporate jazz elements into his work for dramatic purposes, in movies like “The Man with the Golden Arm” (1955), “Sweet Smell of Success” (1957), and “Walk on the Wild Side” (1962).

    Coming out of the Swinging Sixties, when the industry clearly favored a more “popular” sound over purely orchestral scores (until John Williams changed everything), Bernstein kept right on working. Thanks to a generation of younger filmmakers who had grown up on his classics, he never lacked for opportunities. Suddenly he found himself much in demand as a comedy composer, providing the underscores for “Animal House” (1978), “The Blues Brothers” (1980), “Airplane!” (1980), “Stripes” (1981), and “Ghostbusters” (1984).

    For Martin Scorsese, he composed music for “The Age of Innocence” (1993), “Bringing Out the Dead” (1999), and “The Gangs of New York” (2002), though his score for the latter was ultimately rejected. He also adapted Bernard Herrmann’s music for Scorsese’s remake of “Cape Fear” (1991).

    Oh yeah, along the way, he also composed the iconic National Geographic theme – clearly by the same man who wrote “The Magnificent Seven.”

    In all, Bernstein was nominated for 14 Academy Awards, but claimed the Oscar only once, fairly early on, for his work on “Thoroughly Modern Millie” (1967), of all things. His final nomination was for his very last score, for “Far from Heaven” (2002). Elmer Bernstein died on August 18, 2004 at the age of 82.

    Here’s a suite from one of his best-loved scores.

    Happy birthday, Elmer Bernstein.

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