By Neil McKim

Published: Monday, 04 March 2024 at 17:49 PM


1. Bernard Herrmann, conductor – The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956)

This remake by Alfred Hitchcock (of an earlier 1934 film) sees James Stewart and Doris Day cast as two holidaymakers who unwittingly become involved in an assassination plot. The suspenseful climax takes place in the Royal Albert Hall – with almost ten minutes of music and no dialogue – as the two lead characters attempt to stop a shooting that is timed to coincide with a crashing cymbal. Hitchcock’s soundtrack composer Bernard Herrmann is shown conducting the London Symphony Orchestra (which we named one of the world’s best orchestras.). This remake re-uses a piece from the earlier film, Arthur Benjamin’s Storm Clouds Cantata, with Herrmann tweaking the original score, adding new colours for harp, organ and brass. The music ramps up the tension, complete with thundering percussion.