Halloween: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack

This post contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases The success of the original Halloween launched six sequels, a ravenous decade’s worth of imitators, and Hollywood careers for star Jamie Lee Curtis and director John Carpenter. But its budget was a micro one, and director Carpenter managed to save a

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The success of the original Halloween launched six sequels, a ravenous decade’s worth of imitators, and Hollywood careers for star Jamie Lee Curtis and director John Carpenter. But its budget was a micro one, and director Carpenter managed to save a few bucks by hiring the same composer he’d worked with since his days as a student and struggling indie–himself. Borrowing the staccato rhythmic devices of Mike Oldfield’s Tubular Bells cum Exorcist score, Carpenter overlaid them with a few simple Grand Guignol-esque synth chords and created nothing less than a surprisingly enduring horror classic. Carpenter also gleaned a few hints from Italian prog-rock horror-score kings Goblin, imbuing his simple, synthesizer-based cues with an almost subconscious sense of dread, tension, and impending doom. If the music has become something of a modern cliché, that’s only a testament to its continued ability to strike terror in the hearts of listeners. –Jerry McCulley

This post contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases