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result(s) for
"Silent films Musical accompaniment History and criticism."
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Film Music: A History
by
Wierzbicki, James
in
Film Studies
,
Motion picture music
,
Motion picture music -- History and criticism
2009
Film Music: A History explains the development of film music by considering large-scale aesthetic trends and structural developments alongside socioeconomic, technological, cultural, and philosophical circumstances.
The book’s four large parts are given over to Music and the \"Silent\" Film (1894--1927), Music and the Early Sound Film (1895--1933), Music in the \"Classical-Style\" Hollywood Film (1933--1960), and Film Music in the Post-Classic Period (1958--2008). Whereas most treatments of the subject are simply chronicles of \"great film scores\" and their composers, this book offers a genuine history of film music in terms of societal changes and technological and economic developments within the film industry. Instead of celebrating film-music masterpieces, it deals—logically and thoroughly—with the complex ‘machine’ whose smooth running allowed those occasional masterpieces to happen and whose periodic adjustments prompted the large-scale twists and turns in film music’s path.
Part One: Music and the \"Silent\" Film (1894–1927)
Chapter One: Origins, 1894–1905
Chapter Two: The Nickelodeon, 1905–1915
Chapter Three: Feature Films, 1915–1927
Part Two: ‘Classic’ Film Music (1927–1950)
Chapter Four: The Coming of Sound (1927–1929)
transition: Edison’s ideas
Early technologies (pre-1927) (Edison, De Forester, etc.)
Anticipations of a great future (Carl Van Vechten, George Antheil, etc.)
Problems of amplification, synchronization
Vitaphone: \"Don Juan,\" \"The Jazz Singer,\" etc.
Other systems and their costs, usefulness, adaptations, etc.
The immediate effect on the industry (cite numbers of installations, but also note persistence of ‘silent’ films in Japan, etc.)
transition: the lines/scene from 1953 \"Singin’ in the Rain\" ???
Chapter Five: Early Sound Films (1929–1933)
transition : the original \"Singin’ in the Rain’
The fad for musicals (cite the numbers)
\"Steamboat Willie\" (the Disney innovations)
anti-musical, pro-musical industry shifts ca. 1931 (draw from all the extra research done for the Gershwin article in JAMS)
Approaches/aesthetics: wall-to-wall music vs. no music at all vs. only diegetic music (mention the various approaches in USSR, England, France, Germany, Italy, etc.)
Early commentary in the trade press (on sound in general, on musicals, on music, on ‘theme songs’)
transition : negative commentary on \"theme songs\"
Chapter Six: Music in the Classical-Style Hollywood Film (1933–1950)
transition : the reference to ‘theme song’ in \"King Kong\"
Max Steiner and \"King Kong,\" \"The Informer\" (biographical info; earlier efforts) (info on how the \"KK\" score came about)
Definitions of \"classical\" style (cite Gorbman, Kalinak, Bordwell, Flinn, etc.); then offer a better definition/discussion of the idea of the ‘classical’ film; lead up to the idea of ‘classical’ = standardization
Standardization of genres
Standardization of gestures:
Standardization of production:
The composers (individuals, certainly, but holding to a standardized approach nevertheless): Stothart, Waxman, Korngold, Kaper, Carl Stallings, Newman, Rozsa, Webb, Donan, Herrmann, etc. (their early accomplishments; their backgrounds; studio-director affiliations; basic approaches/styles …)
Standardization of distribution:
transition : post-war troubles for the ‘studio system’ (the coming of television, the Supreme Court decision for divestiture, the gross revenue tax ca. 1952)
Part Three: Film Music in the Post-Classic Period (1950–2000)
Chapter Seven: Post-War Innovations; Struggle for Survival (1950–1960)
transition : disastrous economic effects on the studio system
Hollywood reaction: breakdown of ‘studio system’; epics, musicals, Technicolor, 3-D, Cinerama
The first \"soundtrack albums\" in the early 1950s (LPs)
The close relationship between Hollywood and Broadway
The rise of inexpensive scores (Ronald Stein for the Roger Corman films, etc. …)
Introduction of pop music and jazz (\"Blackboard Jungle,\" teen rock movies, Elvis films, etc.)
The sci-fi genre and electronic music (\"Forbidden Planet,\" \"Them!\", \"The Day the Earth Stood Still\" and many more) (but back up and deal with \"Spellbound\" (1945), \"The Lost Weekend\" (1945) and other theremin scores …)
Best-selling songs (\"High Noon\" (1952); Henry Mancini …)
Jazzy scores like \"On the Waterfront\" (1954), \"Baby Doll\" (1956), \"Anatomy of a Murder\" (1959), \"The Man with the Golden Arm\" (1955)
Hitchcock-Herrmann: \"Vertigo\" (1958), \"North by Northwest\" (1959), \"Psycho\" (1960)
Epics: \"Ben-Hur\" (1959), \"The Alamo,\" \"Spartacus\" (1960) : epic scores, w. overture, entr’acte, exit music.
transition: budget considerations vs. a need to compete with television
Chapter Eight: Eclecticism (1960–1980)
transition: restrictions = opportunity ???
big themes, big songs: \"Dr. No\" (1962) (certainly this features a \"big\" song in the main titles …); \"Born Free\" (1966), \"Lawrence of Arabia\" (1962), \"The Way We Were\" (1973) (the first film to feature a \"big\" song in the end credits???)
weird stuff: \"The Birds\" (1963), \"The Andromeda Strain\" (1971) \"THX 1138: (1971)
Kubrick and eclecticism: \"Lolita\" (1962), \"Dr. Strangelove\" (1964) \"2001: A Space Odyssey\" (1968), \"A Clockwork Orange\" (1971)
\"To Kill a Mockingbird\" (1962)
compilation scores: \"The Graduate\" (1967), \"Easy Rider\" (1969), \"American Graffiti\" (1973)
mixture scores (i.e., pop with classic style): \"Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid\" (1969)
‘modernist’ scores: \"Jaws\" (1975), \"Apocalypse Now\" (1979), \"Planet of the Apes\" (1968)
rebirth of the classic-style score: \"Star Wars\" (1977), \"Close Encounters of the Third Kind\" (1977), \"Superman\" (1978), \"Raiders of the Lost Ark\" (1981), \"E.T. – the Extraterrestrial\" (1982) [of course, these are all by John Williams; what about the other composers who jumped on the neo-classic bandwagon?]
issues: the compilation score, the re-birth of the classic-style score
transition: on to the postmodern age
Chapter Nine: (1980–2000) New Definitions and New Uses of Film Music
transition: define the \"postmodern\" as eclectic, non-linear, referential, etc.
raises the question: what, exactly, is film music, anyway? What is a film score?
mention the rise of technology that allows a composer to concoct a quasi-full score in a home studio (MIDI, sequencers, sound modules, ProTools, etc.)
note rising interest in sound effects as music …
note the new role of the ‘music supervisor’ (i.e., the acquirer of licensed materials …)
\"The Terminator\" (1984)
\"Die Hard\" (1988)
Michael Kamen, James Horner, Jerry Goldsmith, Hans Zimmer, Danny Elfman
Diverse examples: \"The Terminator\" (1984), \"Die Hard\" (1988), \"Dirty Dancing\" (1987), \"Edward Scissorhands\" (1990), \"Thelma and Louise\" (1991), \"The Thin Red Line\" (1998), \"The Gladiator\" (2000)
transition : so, where are we heading?
Epilogue: (the twenty-first century)
On the one hand, films like \"Harry Potter\" and \"Lord of the Rings\" suggest a return to tradition
On the other hand, things, like \"Moulin Rouge\" (2001), \"Run, Lola, Run\" (1998), \"Kill Bill\" (2003) suggest an embrace of the \"postmodern condition\" by the film audience (at least, by the younger members thereof)
James Wierzbicki is a musicologist who teaches at the University of Michigan and serves as executive editor of the American Musicological Society's Music of the United States of America series of scholarly editions. His current research focuses on twentieth-century music in general and film music and electronic music in particular.
The sounds of silent films : new perspectives on history, theory and practice
by
Tieber, Claus, editor
,
Windisch, Anna K., editor
in
Silent film music History and criticism.
,
Silent films Musical accompaniment.
2014
'The Sounds of Silent Films' is a collection of investigatory and theoretical essays that unite up-to-date research on the complex historical performance practices of silent film accompaniment with in-depth analyses of relevant case studies.
Music and the silent film : contexts and case studies, 1895-1924
1997
Most people’s view of silent film music is of a pianist playing old warhorse scores while watching the flickering screen. This innovative book shows that there was much more to silent film music and that often it was planned from the start as an integral part of the film. The first of three volumes investigating film music, this book devotes one chapter to films before 1900 and Camille Saint-Saëns’s score for L’Assassinat du Duc de Guise (1908). Another chapter looks closely at film scores composed by Walter Cleveland Simon for several films of 1912. The two main chapters are devoted to significant films of the silent period, D.W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation (1915) and René Clair’s Entr’acte (1924). Breil’s Birth of a Nation score was a compilation of many sources, but, when played by an orchestra accompanying the film in a theatre showing, it often matched the epic nature of the film and was one source of its great popularity.
Performing New Media, 1890-1915
2014
In the years before the First World War, showmen, entrepreneurs, educators, and scientists used magic lanterns and cinematographs in many contexts and many venues. To employ these silent screen technologies to deliver diverse and complex programs usually demanded audio accompaniment, creating a performance of both sound and image. These shows might include live music, song, lectures, narration, and synchronized sound effects provided by any available party-projectionist, local talent, accompanist or backstage crew-and would often borrow techniques from shadow plays and tableaux vivants. The performances were not immune to the influence of social and cultural forces, such as censorship or reform movements. This collection of essays considers the ways in which different visual practices carried out at the turn of the 20th century shaped performances on and beside the screen.
Marvellous Noise and Modest Recording Instruments: Dada, Surrealism, and Early Sound Cinema
2018
This thesis assesses the ways in which films related to Dada and Surrealism used sound techniques during the 1920s and 1930s. It argues that their audio-visual approaches were distinctive, and related to important concepts and strategies within the movements such as collage, juxtaposition, and the Surrealist 'marvellous.' Historical research is combined with close analysis and theoretical interpretation to examine the early sound film context in detail, while also bringing a new aural perspective to Dada and Surrealist cinema studies. The project addresses an important, yet neglected, part of film sound history, while also pushing art historical interpretation of these works beyond a long-held visual bias.Dada and Surrealist cinema's heyday coincided with the period of transition from silent to sound film, and several filmmakers associated with these movements, including Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dada, Jean Cocteau, and Hans Richter, were at the forefront of this change, producing some of the earliest sound films in their countries of work. Audio-visual experimentation flourished during this period, providing opportunities for these and other filmmakers to try a range of provocative, idiosyncratic methods that prioritised irrationality and sensation.Dada and Surrealist practices were inherently heterogeneous, and their soundtrack approaches were too, mixing silent and sound film methods: from using pre-existing gramophone accompaniments to creating composite sound and image collages, from remixing dance music to silencing the leading lady. Informed by the contemporary debates around asynchrony and counterpoint, I investigate these experiments to establish what Dada or Surrealism audio-visuality actually was.This thesis is essentially a historical corrective, which questions assumptions about this film period, and reinterprets how Dada and Surrealist works fit into it. Case studies of works by Buñuel and Dada, Cocteau, Richter, Man Ray, Len Lye, and Joseph Cornell illustrate discussions of pre-existing music use, audio collage techniques, and the role of voices. Sound is demonstrated to have been fundamental in creating the irrational, disorientating, or immersive experiences most valued in Dada and Surrealism film.
Dissertation
Reconstructing the Musical Arrangement for \The Battle of the Somme\ (1916)
2002
The Ulster Museum, in a collaborative project with the film archive of the Imperial War Museum, screened \"The Battle of the Somme\" with a live piano accompaniment on July 1, 2000. The musical accompaniment was based on suggestions made by composer and musician J. Morton Hutcheson in his August 17, 1916, \"Music in Cinema\" column in \"Bioscope.\" Haggith examines the historical and aesthetic issues involved in constructing scores for silent films. He also discusses the production and reception history of \"The Battle of the Somme\" and how the reconstructed score affected the audience of the screening in 2000.
Journal Article