It could be a single scream, shot through the night, piercing the silence, that raises the hair on the back of your neck.
Sound design is one of the more crucial elements of speculative film, regardless of the media. Canadian musician and composer Mark Korven, is one of those artists of sound, painting pictures with music. Fluent in several instruments, Korven started in the late 70’s playing guitar in rock bands, though today he focuses almost completely on soundtracks. You’ve probably heard his music on the revival of The Twilight Zone in the late 80’s, or the PBS docu-series America at a Crossroads, though most people know Korven from his film soundtracks, most notably Cube (1997) and The Witch (2015). While relying on electronic instruments for Cube, Korven utilizes his knowledge of more extravagant instruments for The Witch, featuring a Swedish instrument called the nyckelharpa. This medieval violin was the perfect instrument to capture the setting and tone of the film. Korven also used a 20th century instrument called a water phone as well, providing some of the strange, percussive sounds in the score.
Korven’s score for The Witch is unnerving and extremely disturbing, yet hauntingly beautiful in its simplicity. The film is very primal, which allows it to operate on several different levels of dread and fear, while still packing a strong emotional punch. The score heightens the suspense to a fever pitch, often using the silent spaces to strengthen the visual cues, while never relying on the typical ‘jump-scare’ music swells we hear so often in horror films. The grating drone and shrieking tones in tracks such as ‘Caleb’s Seduction’ and ‘Caleb’s Death’ contrast with the percussive bits in ‘A Witch Stole Sam’ and ‘Witch’s Coven’ that, even when taken out of context, are guaranteed to creep you out.
BOB PASTORELLA