I
had originally sketched out the musical ideas for "The Music of
Erich Zann" several months ago. However, when my hard drive
crashed in August, the music was lost. However, I remembered the
fundamental ideas, and different functions that I would perform on
the theme, so it only took a bit of time to recreate what I had lost.
But
the challenge of the music was there from the beginning. I chose this
project because of the central role of music. I feel that the level
of success of this film would rest with the quality of Zann's
other-worldly music.
From
the beginning I wondered how I would create the music. I considered
making the music with electric guitar, classical guitar, or
computer-generated guitar. Because of the challenges with recording
live guitar, either electric or classical, I went for the easiest
solution, which was to use computer-generated music. At first, I
thought that I would only use the guitar, but I later felt that the
terror would have its own music, and I was then able to go with more
synthesized sounds.
The
main musical theoretical theme that I was trying to develop was within the octonic scale, then to fill out the chromatic with the diminished
seventh chord that makes up the tones not included in the octonic
scale. Every measure plays on such harmonies in different ways. The
octonic scale gives me a chance to exploit nightmare chords,
Petruschka chords, augmented seconds, and lots of other fun and
unusual harmonies that aren't in tonal scales. I hope these harmonic
explorations lent to the haunted sensibility of Erich Zann's curse.
For
the nicer version of the music that Zann plays in the middle of the
film, I utilized the same ideas, but rather kept the tones and
harmonies within tonic scales. Thus, the music seemed different, yet
the same.
I am planning to further develop these musical ideas to create a larger scale piece. I have already completed some of that; here is a live recording of what I hope to be a much larger piece. Website:





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