Bernard Herrmann

‘pop’ composer?

Authors

  • Edward Green Manhattan School of Music Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/pomh.v5i1.7

Keywords:

Aesthetic Realism, Alfred Hitchcock, Bernard Herrmann, Eli Siegel, Henry Mancini, Max Steiner, North by Northwest, Torn Curtain, The Wrong Man

Abstract

Introducing a special issue of Popular Music History honoring, on his centenary, the great American film composer Bernard Herrmann, this essay explores the complex and conflicted relation Herrmann had to the world of ‘popular’ music—his great interest in its history, yet the distance he kept from contemporary popular styles. Among matters discussed are: his partnership with Alfred Hitchcock and its breakup over Hitchcock’s insistence on the inclusion of a ‘pop song’ for the 1966 film Torn Curtain; the scores to The Wrong Man and North by Northwest; and Herrmann’s attempts to write Broadway musicals. In the process, comparison is made to music by Henry Mancini and Max Steiner—among others. The essay suggests that Eli Siegel’s philosophy of Aesthetic Realism can shed crucial light on both the music and life of Herrmann; in particular it can make sense of the anguish Herrmann had on the question of whether his artistic self-expression could include contemporary vernacular styles of music, or needed to exclude them. The essay concludes with a brief discussion of the term ‘classic’, and also of current methodology in the field of ‘popular music studies’.

Author Biography

  • Edward Green, Manhattan School of Music

    Edward Green (Guest Editor of this issue) teaches at Manhattan School of Music. A composer of film and concert music, his musicological work is also wide-ranging. His doctoral thesis concerned Haydn and Mozart, and he is editor both of the Cambridge Companion to Duke Ellington (forthcoming) and China and the West (Shanghai Conservatory Press).

References

Brown, Royal S. 1976. ‘Interview with Bernard Herrmann’. High Fidelity, September.

Green, Edward. 2005. ‘Note on Two Conceptions of Aesthetic Realism’. British Journal of Aesthetics 45.4 (October): 438–40.

—2006. ‘Biography as Ethics: A Study in the Combat between Contempt and Respect in the Mind of Felix Mendelssohn’. International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music 37.2 (December): 157–66.

Siegel, Eli. 1986 [1949]. ‘Mind and Popularity’. In The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known, 684, 14 May. New York: Definition Press.

—1997. ‘Four Statements of Aesthetic Realism’. In Ellen Reiss (ed.), The ‘Modern Quarterly’ Beginnings of Aesthetic Realism, 1922–1923. New York: Definition Press.

Smith, Steven C. 1991. A Heart at Fire’s Center: The Life and Music of Bernard Herrmann. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Discography

Herrmann, Bernard. 1971. The Four Faces of Jazz. Decca PFS 4280. London Phase Four SPC 21077. LP.

Published

2011-06-23

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Green, E. (2011). Bernard Herrmann: ‘pop’ composer?. Popular Music History, 5(1), 7-20. https://doi.org/10.1558/pomh.v5i1.7