Monumental Movement Podcast
This episode explores the evolution of modern horror soundtracks—where sound design, silence, and psychological tension converge into a distinct cinematic language. From orchestral dissonance to minimal electronic textures, horror music has continuously redefined how fear is constructed and perceived. We trace this evolution through composers such as John Carpenter, whose stripped-down synthesizer scores introduced repetition and tonal minimalism, and Trent Reznor, whose work integrates industrial textures, ambient tension, and digital processing into contemporary film sound. Their approaches shift focus from melody to atmosphere—where texture, rhythm, and space generate unease. Technologically, advancements in synthesis, sampling, and spatial audio have expanded the palette of horror scoring. Low-frequency design, granular processing, and dynamic range manipulation allow sound to function as psychological trigger, often operating below conscious perception. Historically, horror soundtracks reflect changing cultural anxieties—moving from external threats to internal states of fear, isolation, and uncertainty. Music becomes less illustrative and more immersive, shaping emotional response through ambiguity and restraint. This episode analyzes horror sound as architecture of tension—where absence, distortion, and repetition create an unstable sonic environment. Through history, technology, and aesthetics, we explore how modern horror soundtracks transform listening into an experience of controlled unease. 【Related Column】Western horror movies and their soundtracks since 2010 https://monumental-movement.jp/en/Colum-Horror-Soundtrack/
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