Häxan is a soundtrack for a silent movie made in 1921 by B. Christensen.
Art Zoyd's fascination with classic horror movies from the 1920s began with
Faust (on the film by F.W. Murnau), a soundtrack released in 1996. A year later, they took the same ingredients and produced an album a notch above. The use of synthetic keyboards and samplers is better integrated and feels less erroneous to the fan of the band's early all-acoustic albums. While
Faust was a continuous suite of pieces alternately written by founding members
Gérard Hourbette and
Thierry Zaboïtzeff,
Häxan can be split in two independent parts. First is
Hourbette's 30-minute piece "Glissements Progressifs du Plaisir," followed by six shorter pieces penned by
Zaboïtzeff. Atmospheric moments are more blurred, less descriptive of the scenes they relate to, while the aggressive passages tend to be more complex (especially "Épreuves d'Acier").
Faust had a theatrical let's-give-you-a-scare feel. This one is subtler, more textural, and mature. It may be less striking upon first listen (less percussion and grandeur), but in the long run its more mysterious side will win you over.