by Kevin McLaughlin

Film purists who regard cinema primarily as a visual art argue that live music, especially when it emanates from something as grand as a symphony orchestra in a space like Mandel Concert Hall, upsets the balance. Dialogue and car horns stay neatly in the soundtrack, while music — and the emotion it carries — grows enormous and takes over the experience.
Then again…
A live orchestra intensifies the emotions of the soundtrack, heightening everything that touches flesh and spirit. We become newly sensitized to the score. In Herrmann’s case, harmonies and Wagnerian endless melodies compel us to listen more deeply and, in the process, transform the experience.



On Friday, February 13, assistant conductor Brett Mitchell will lead The Cleveland Orchestra in a live performance of Bernard Herrmann’s score to Vertigo, coordinating the music with a screening of Alfred Hitchcock’s 1958 psychological thriller.