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Published: Friday, 11 October 2024 at 08:00 AM


Let’s face it, horror films are all-the-scarier because of music. Things that go bump in the night are often punctuated by the stab of violins, the whine of woodwinds or the cackle of choir. But not always. Composers have come up with all manner of ways to give us the willies on screen over the years. So, get some popcorn (and a cushion to hide behind) as we rank 13 of the very best horror film scores of all time.

The best horror film scores of all time…

13. The Bride of Frankenstein (Franz Waxman, 1935)

Not many sequels surpass the original, but James Whale’s follow-up to Frankenstein (1931) is one of them and not least of all because of Franz Waxman’s original score. Wildly exciting and ahead of its time in many ways, Waxman’s music was riding high on the wave of the new ‘Hollywood Sound’.

Film music as we know it was really born just a couple of years before and Waxman was part of its origin story, along with Max Steiner, Alfred Newman and Erich Wolfgang Korngold. This horror film score, with its thrilling orchestral palette and something called a theremin, really made audiences sit up and take notice.

12. Bram Stoker’s Dracula (Wojciech Kilar, 1992)

The ’90s were all about style (over substance?) and Francis Ford Coppola’s take on Bram Stoker’s legendary vampire tale was certainly an expensive exercise. Keanu Reeves’s British accent remains awful, but the film is – today – loved for its excesses and high camp. Gothic horror abounds on screen and in the music, with Polish composer Wojciech Kilar pulling out all the stops. The brass is flagrant, the choir is steaming and the strings are frenzied…

11. Ring/Ringu (Kenji Kawai, 1998)

Hideo Nakata’s 1998 frightener remains one of the most talked about horror movies of all time. It’s a cut above the Hollywood remake which followed a handful of years later, and the music by Japanese composer Kenji Kawai is a big part of why Ring (or Ringu) is so intense.

Kawai created a brilliantly unsettling soundworld of synths and strings, in a John Carpenter vein, augmented by punchy percussion and all manner of sounds. Hans Zimmer scored the remake, and while his efforts are effective, there’s something more chilling about Kawai’s intense horror film score.