Herrmann, while a student in the New York Public School system, was a voracious reader who enjoyed the works of individualist, iconoclastic writers like D. H. Lawrence, Eugene O'Neill and James McNeill Whistler, the latter of whose essays The Gentle Art of Making Enemies would provide inspiration for him on a more volatile scale, and insure the foundation for his idiosyncratic personality, which colleague and whit Oscar Levant once described "...as an apprenticeship in insolence." Herrmann also studied the scores of the great symphonists, played his father's gramophone recordings and attended Carnegie Hall concerts. By the age of thirteen he discovered Hector Berlioz's Treatise on Orchestration, the book Herrmann later claimed would decide the course of his future career.
Herrmann's formal music education began in 1927 at DeWitt Clinton High School, where one of his classmates was the composer Jerome Moross. From Gustav Heine, his first composition teacher, Herrmann would learn all the basics of his craft --- and, perhaps, inspite of him, acquired a taste for the singular and uncommon in music, discovering the works of America's most unique composers, Charles Ives and Carl Ruggles, both of whom he would later champion as conductor of the CBS Symphony.
![]() |
By 1933 Herrmann had conducted the New Chamber Orchestra in performances of his own works as well as those by Bax, Bennett, Milhaud and Ives. He was consequently hired the following year by CBS Radio's music director Johnny Green as his assistant. There Herrmann, who programmed and conducted music of his choosing, introducing his listeners to new and unusual works, many heard for the first time anywhere. In 1937 he was chosen to compose and conduct for the "Columbia Workshop", a CBS radio series featuring the talents of several great writers and directors. This followed in 1938 with similar work for their drama series "The Mercury Theatre on the Air", whose brilliant founder-director was a twenty-three year old Orson Welles and whose Holloween Eve production of H. G. Wells's The War of the Worlds would for each achieve a notoriety neither had anticipated.
![]() |
![]() |
Herrmann, who died in his sleep on December 24, 1975, one day after the final Taxi Driver recording sessions, leaves behind a legacy of major film scores, unique in all the cinema; recordings which he conducted for English Decca, Fifth Continent, Lyrita and Unicorn-Kanchana, concert works which are only now being rediscovered by the public on digital recordings and in the concert hall. His fascinating career -- and "one-off" personality -- have, likewise, been captured in Music for the Movies: Bernard Herrmann, a first-class TV documentary released in 1992.
In many respects Herrmann remains the most influential of all composers writing for film (note that I do not say "film composers", a term Herrmann disparaged; "many great composers of whatever nationality -- Auric, Bliss, Copland, Frankel, Prokofiev, Rota, Shostakovich, Walton -- composed for the cinema," he once reminded me, "but one aspect of their creative output."). His legacy lives on: in our memories -- and, for those of us priviledged enough to have known him, in our hearts.


