Horror Music


I suppose if I asked most people what music they identified with horror, John Carpenter’s “Halloween Theme” and Mike Oldfield’s “Tubular Bells” (The Exorcist) would come up first. After that, you’d get a lot of Rob Zombie and Glenn Danzig. So right off the bat, you’re looking at an enormous variety of sounds and styles connected mainly by association. While John Carpenter’s work was intentionally composed for the film in which it appeared, “Tubular Bells” was originally a 50 minute progressive rock opus that was anything but sinister or foreboding in its full form. Misfits was a goth punk band that happened to favor horror themes. White Zombie’s horror imagery was more a matter of crudeness and vulgarity in the spirit of GWAR; their sound was a frontrunner in the emergence of industrial groove metal, and the greatest “horror” associated with Rob was the countless terrible nu metal spinoffs. A couple of “top ten horror songs” lists I stumbled upon even list Bobby Boris Pickett’s “Monster Mash” and Richard O’Brien’s “Time Warp”. I mean, “Monster Mash” is a fun Halloween song, sure, but horror? Really? And the Rocky Horror Picture Show does make me want to vomit, but we have to draw the line somewhere.

Suffice to say, “horror” music is not a genre at all. Simply associating a song with a scene or theme is enough to relate them; Huey Lewis and the News will probably make me smile and think of Christian Bale chopping people to bits in his apartment for the rest of my life. But there are definitely certain musical attributes that conjure in us a less glitzy feeling of dread than Hellbilly Deluxe. That skittering cockroach beat in the background of Halloween is completely unnerving; Carnival music is way creepier than Stephen King’s It; Black Sabbath’s appreciation for diabolus in musica virtually invented heavy metal; and it took a firm dose of the blues in 1988 for Danzig to capture a sense of the sinister that Misfits could never convey.

I don’t believe that any particular musical formula is the coalescence of evil. The music we find most haunting is derived from association too, but it connects in more subtle ways than say, the fact that a particular song appears in a horror film or mentions witches in the chorus. The real deal distorts what comforts us, denies our sense of order, and pries upon our innocence. Through a musical medium as through any other, horror focuses on shattering the lens through which we perceive reality as an ordered, logical construct. It reminds us of the real nightmares in life while nullifying our means to counteract them. It takes us to the world of the child, where emotional extremes enhance our senses of comfort and terror alike.

The carnival tune and music box are prime targets, conjuring in our minds a time when fear was more potent. The brief piano loop, the simple hum, the monotone drone–these bring us to solitude and isolation through minimalism. Effective horror themes offer no comforting symphony or rock ensemble to encase us in a nuanced world. They surround us with something singular and far from warm, or with nothing at all. The wind chimes warn of a storm; when none is coming, the darkness is all the more unnatural. The cathedral bell, a sign of fellowship on a Sunday morning, also tolls for death. A twitch, a buzz, a repeated knocking, a bit of static–things that would otherwise annoy us–exploit the close connection between discomfort and tension.

Or else we can completely overwhelm the senses with noise that strips away the familiarity which typically diminishes extreme music’s effect, leaving us a nervous wreck. When Blut Aus Nord chose to employ programmed, industrial blast beats in their 777 trilogy, they effectively eliminated the one element of the music that would have sounded too familiar to disturb. Instead, the epileptic guitar finds companionship in a persistent, unnatural clatter designed to place us permanently on edge.

Other bands have found other means to the same end. Peste Noire’s unique “black ‘n’ roll” sound enlivens a standard formula for “evil” music with a pep and a grin, giving the brutalizer a human face in the spirit of medieval sadism. Sunn O))) are inclined to drone on for ages, developing a false sense of comfort before infusing their deep buzz with a caterwaul of shrill pitches and clattering chimes. (I actually had a guy start freaking out on me at work one day when “Cry For The Weeper”, which he didn’t even notice playing, hit the 3:55 mark.)

And lastly, we can’t forget the power of lyrics to render a song gruesome. The stereotypical lines of a black metal song–nonsense about necromoonyetis and an appeal to Satanism far less disturbing than the average Christian commentator on Fox News–are pure cheese, and they entertain us in a manner similar to your typical zombie flick. But when you first heard Smashing Pumpkin’s “x.y.u.”, you probably got a feeling more akin to Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer.

Horror in lyrics is something a bit the opposite of horror in sound; it strikes us most deeply when we can be convinced that there is absolutely nothing supernatural about it. There are certainly a few exceptions–Townes Van Zandt’s tall tale in “Our Mother the Mountain” chills me to the bone–but generally speaking, the real atrocities committed throughout human history far exceed the limits of our imaginations. Vlad Tepes was worse than any vampire, and from Elizabeth Bathory and Ariel Castro to Hernando Cortes and Adolf Hitler, we are flooded by examples of direct personal cruelty and dehumanized mass slaughter. When a song manages to make us think of these individuals and events beyond the safety blanket of historical narrative, an authentic feeling or horror is hard to deny.

3 responses to “Horror Music

  1. I’m glad I’m not the only one who isn’t exactly overwhelmed by “The Rocky Horror Picture Show”. For the most part, the music is painfully average–and a musical without music is nothing. It doesn’t have much of a horror factor, either. Probably the most disconcerting thing about the film was being pelted with rice by fellow audience members–and the film isn’t really that funny, either.

    I consider it to be one of the most glaring oversights in the world of cinema that “Rocky Horror” is subjected to ceaseless revivals across the world, whereas the far superior “Phantom of the Paradise” is basically an obscurity. I have a copy of the soundtrack on vinyl–it’s an absolutely brilliant piece of work. The only thing I would’ve added to the soundtrack album would have been the music that plays during the final scene before the credits.

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  2. One of the creepiest piece of music that still gets to me wasn’t even made for anything horror-related. It’s the song “Jeepers Creepers” as covered by Ethel Waters. This song played throughout 2001’s horror flick of the same name and it would start playing whenever the Creeper was getting close.

    To say that it started to get on my nerves in that uncomfortable way would be an understatement. Even the Bing Crosby version with him soothing voice doesn’t erase the creepy feeling I get whenever I listen to it.

    As for other examples of horror in music I can easily say that I’ve never really been disturbed by any song by Rob Zombie. His films may be disturbing (both in a good sense and a bad sense), but I always thought they were exactly what you described them to be. They were the precursor to the nu metal phase. That in itself would be the only thing horrific about Rob Zombie’s music.

    I don’t mind the traditional orchestral and symphonic horror musical suites when they fit the film. Some of the best horror themes tend to be of the traditional kind. The horror music from the 30’s and 40’s are some of the best and they were still able to incorporate some of the discordance you speak of that really gets under the skin of the listener.

    I think nowadays most horror films tend to just rehash the same sound over and over again. There’s less emphasis on using a film score in a horror film to help create the mood. I think the last filmmaker who saw the advantage of original music to add to a horror film’s effect on the audience was John Carpenter and he mostly trusted himself to create the music since no one else truly understood (with the exception of him letting Ennio Morricone handle the score for The Thing) what he was trying do with his films.

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  3. Pingback: Horror Song of the Day: Polymorphia (by Krzysztof Penderecki) | Through the Shattered Lens

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