Bernard Herman · Psycho
The cellar
Table of contents
Dynamics
- Forceful opening: fortissimo with accents — immediate shock and intensity.
- When the fugue-like texture begins, subject entries can be pp but still strongly accented — the quiet dynamic does not feel “safe”; it feels tense and controlled.
- End of cue: sudden crescendo to f — functions like a launch-point into the next cue (Discovery).
Rhythm / Tempo / Metre
- Allegro molto.
- Duple time overall.
- Fugue-like section has a moto perpetuo feel — continuous motion drives anxiety.
- Tremolo intensifies nervous energy and makes the pulse feel more urgent.
- Rests inside subjects/countersubjects create fragmentation and dislocation — contributes to the idea of Norman Bates’s persona “breaking apart”.
- A concluding sustained note gives a brief, false sense of stability before the next cue.
Texture
- Bars 1–4: homophonic + homorhythmic.
- Bars 5–57: not a strict fugue, but fugue-like:
- Contrapuntal, increasingly polyphonic
- Multiple subjects and countersubjects enter and re-enter
- Texture becomes the main driver of tension
- Bar 57: returns to homophonic texture — structural “snap back” after the dense counterpoint.
Structure
- Overall: fugue-like design, where structure, texture, and harmony are linked (the harmony is basically “created” by the counterpoint).
- Bars 1–4: intro (your note: “in D / dominant preparation”).
- Main fugue-like section centred in G (your note).
- Subject/countersubject map (cleaned, but keeping your bar numbers):
- Bars 5–12: Subject 1 in cellos + double bass
- Bars 13–20: Subject 1 in viola (octave higher than before) + Countersubject 1 in cellos/double bass
- Bars 21–28: Subject moves to violin 2 + Countersubject 1 in violas + Countersubject 2 in cellos/double bass
- Subject appears in violin 1 a bar earlier than expected (your observation = good “fugue-like but rule-breaking” point)
- From bar 29: violin 2 (subject) + viola (CS1) + cello/double bass (CS2)
- From bar 32: cellos/double bass take a fragmented subject + viola takes Countersubject 3
- Bar 40: Countersubject 4 in violas
- CS3 + CS4 = fragmented versions of the main subject, distinguished mainly by rest placement (CS3 rests at the end of each bar; CS4 rests at the start)
- Bar 45: Countersubject 1 becomes a descending chromatic scale
- Bar 47: subject in unison
- Bar 58: the fugue-like texture breaks down (you link this to the on-screen unmasking)
- Bar 68: build-up to final chord
Melody
- Not “tune-led”, but driven by 4 melodic ideas.
- Main 8-bar subject includes sequential movement.
- Links back to the Prelude (your note: hint of Motif 2b).
- Subject interval profile (angular/dissonant):
- Bar 10: tritone (E → B♭), then down a perfect 5th
- Bar 11: minor 6th
- Bar 12: F♯ → D♭ (diminished 6th)
- Countersubjects:
- Countersubject 1: chromatic descending pattern (sequence-like)
- Countersubject 2: introduces crotchet rests — increases urgency
- Countersubjects 3 + 4: fragments of the main subject, shaped by rests
Instrumentation / Sonority
- Bars 1–2: forceful octave trills with accents — immediate “panic” signal.
- Bars 5–57: sustained tremolo — heightens nervousness/tension.
- Frequent divisi, with parts overlapping by a quaver — makes the texture feel overcrowded and unstable.
- Bar 47 special colour:
- divisi continues, but cello divides between sul ponticello and naturale — richer, more nuanced sound.
- cello + double bass play sustained chords here — strong contrast with the moving fugue-like writing.
Tonality
- Overall atonal (your conclusion).
- Even where pitches cluster into “chords”, the effect is dissonant and non-functional — tonal centre is not established.
Harmony
- Harmony is not “progressions”, but vertical result of counterpoint.
- Heavy chromaticism and persistent dissonance.
- Final sonority: augmented triad in Violin 1 against a diminished triad in Violin 2 — produces a questioning, unstable ending.