Watching Dagger of the Mind again last night and it really jumped out at me how vitally important the music scores were to the seventies Columbo series. The music was that good it seemed to replace scenes of dialogue, if that makes sense. What I mean is that sometimes the haunting and suspenseful music scores had the ability to replace scenes that could have included dialogue yet had the same equal effect. Am I making sense here folks or I am just plain old bloody daft? If you think either way just watch this episode again and see you if you arrive at the same inference.
I totally agree with you Rob. I just watched Dagger the other day also and I know what you mean. In that episode and in so many others the music helped to continue the plot and the tension and the suspense. Dialogue was not needed...the music did the talking.
So maybe we are both making sense or we are both bloody daft!!
The episode whose music makes the biggest
impression on me is "The Conspirators".
We see Columbo driving around Los Angeles
with Irish music in the background!
It really sets the mood.
Another series where the music is absolutely
vital is Mission Impossible. This is a show
with very little action (just like Columbo).
For example, there are scenes where all
we are seeing is Barney connecting some
wires. The music's job is to build up
the tension, communicating to the viewer
that this is important and you should
pay attention to what is happening.