Released under his own name instead of his better-known, piano-associated alias,
Hauschka, composer
Volker Bertelmann does a lot with a little on his menacing, minimalist score to
Edward Berger's
All Quiet on the Western Front (2022). The most striking -- unforgettable even -- part of the score is a repeated, pounding three-note motif introduced with the first cue and recurring only occasionally to ominous effect (notably on "Search Party," "Retreat," and "The End"). The composer has revealed that those tones were produced on his great-grandmother's harmonium, making use of its double-bass function (allowing users to replace one register with a lower octave). Much of the rest of
Bertelmann's music here is a somber mix of ambient and bleakly percussive atmospheres; he deliberately omitted brass and woodwinds, opting for slow-shifting strings and more-mechanical sounds, such as layered snares, ratchet noise, and a gran cassa with objects placed on it to create a sound tail after being struck. Two of
Berger's early notes to
Bertelmann were to "destroy" images -- not sentimentalize -- and to aim for something never heard before, especially in a war movie. On those points, it's safe to say that
Bertelmann delivered. ~ Marcy Donelson