Bernard Herman · Psycho

Prelude

4 min readLast updated November 2026 Sign in to track progress
Table of contents

Dynamics

  • Overall extreme dynamic contrast — e.g. ff → mp between Motif A and Motif B1; creates a shock/withdrawal effect and keeps the listener unsettled.
  • Motif A marked molto agitato and attacked hard (accented, down-bow, staccato) — aggressive, stabbing surface.
  • sforsanzo is present

Rhythm / Tempo / Metre

  • (Motif A):Syncopated, repeated attacks — drives tension through rhythmic insistence.
  • (Motif B) : Semiquaver triplet figure (your note: “very Bartók”) — adds nervous energy and a modernist edge.
  • Motif C: jagged dotted rhythm with sudden rests, presented homorhythmically and often sequential — obsessive, mechanical character.
    • Notable timing link: bar 21 Motif C appears as the word “Psycho” appears on screen — clear audio-visual synchronisation.

Texture

  • Opening texture is homorhythmic.
  • Early use of pedal notes (bars 5–6) under the surface activity — creates a sense of trapped, inescapable tension.
  • Bar 5: fuller texture with divisi violins — thickening the string sound as the cue develops.
  • Motifs are often layered and overlapped rather than presented one at a time.
    • Motif A later overlaps with Motif B1 — adds to the sense of instability and collage-like construction.

Structure

  • Bars 1–20 act as an “exposition” of the core motifs A–C.
  • After bar 20, the cue becomes a process of rearranging, varying, transposing, and recombining those motifs.
  • Key returns / signposts in your notes:
    • Bar 25: Motif A returns in root position.
    • Bar 26: Motif A returns to 2nd inversion.
    • Bar 27: return of B1.
    • Bar 31: return of B2.
    • Bar 35: variation of bars 9–10 pattern (major/minor triad interplay).
    • Bar 37: first clear statement of the Psycho theme.
    • Bars 45–46: sigh motif (inverse of the earlier chromatic idea) incorporated into the Psycho theme.
    • Bars 47–48: “hidden” Hitchcock chord — the 1st and 3rd quavers contain Motif A sonority.
    • Bars 69–70: extension of Motif A including C# and D# (your note: combines material from Motif A + B).
    • Bar 73: B2 down an octave.
    • Bar 77: Psycho theme returns with changed accompaniment (see Instrumentation/Sonority).
    • Bars 97–99: clearer tonal region (B♭m7) → then E7 (tritone-related shift).
    • Bar 111: Psycho theme returns in the cello (high register for the instrument).
    • Bar 119: all motifs layered together.
    • Bar 121: sudden return to Motif A, moving into coda; your note: effectively Motif B2 rising in pitch.

Melody

  • Motif B2: Violin 1 melody (bars 5–8).
  • Psycho theme (from bar 37):
    • Longer note-values, conjunct/scalic, balanced phrasing, and swells — more “Romantic” on the surface.
    • Tonal tension inside it: bar 37 centred on B♭, but by bar 41 it shifts to E♭ (a tritone relationship).
  • Motif C is often built from sequential repetition — contributes to an obsessive, locked-in feel.

Instrumentation / Sonority

  • Predominantly strings, with frequent divisi.
  • Motif A sonority and attack (your list — kept examiner-ready):
    • Hitchcock chord (B♭ minor/major 7, 2nd inversion)
    • Abrasive, repeated, syncopated
    • Staccato, con sordino, down-bow, accented, ff
    • Used as a unifying marker: your note says this motif appears 6 times across the film.
  • Bar 77 return of the Psycho theme: theme itself stays the same, but accompaniment changes — e.g. double bass pizzicato on E♭ and an overall louder return.
  • Bar 94: Bartók pizzicato in double bass — percussive snap effect.

Tonality

  • No clear tonal centre overall.
  • Strong sense of tonal ambiguity created by chromaticism and unstable pitch relations.
  • Brief sense of a region around B♭m7 (bars 97–99) is immediately destabilised by a move to E7 (tritone-related).

Harmony

  • Core harmonic colour: the Hitchcock chord (B♭ minor/major 7, 2nd inversion) — not “atonal” in your view, but used to create ambiguity and instability.
  • Bars 9–10: contrary-motion construction that produces a Hitchcock-chord effect a semitone higher (your note: B minor/major 7):
    • Viola rises in minor 3rds
    • Violin 2 descends in major 3rds
    • Combined vertical result creates the biting m/M7 colour.
  • Bars 15–16: the same contrary-motion idea returns, but down a 3rd with the parts reversed (your note):
    • violins take the minor 3rds upwards
    • viola takes the major 3rds downwards
  • Big-picture harmonic strategy: contrast between abrasive stabbing sonorities (Motif A) and ominous chromaticism (B-material), created through deliberate compositional technique.

Context

  • Your point for essays: the obsessive quality of Motif C mirrors Hitchcock’s cross-cutting editing style.
  • Main unity takeaway: the Psycho theme stays the same, while surrounding motifs vary and recombine; unity comes from recurrence + transformation rather than continuous new material.