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Seeing Through Music: Gender and Modernism in Classic Hollywood Film Scores [Kõva köide]

(Professor of Music, Oxford University, Oxford)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 208 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 160x239x23 mm, kaal: 516 g, 28 screen stills
  • Sari: Oxford Music/Media Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Aug-2011
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195383451
  • ISBN-13: 9780195383454
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 208 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 160x239x23 mm, kaal: 516 g, 28 screen stills
  • Sari: Oxford Music/Media Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Aug-2011
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195383451
  • ISBN-13: 9780195383454
Teised raamatud teemal:
Hollywood film music is often mocked as a disreputably 'applied' branch of the art of composition that lacks both the seriousness and the quality of the classical or late-romantic concert and operatic music from which it derives. Its composers in the 1930s and '40s were themselves often scornful of it and aspired to produce more 'serious' works that would enhance their artistic reputation.

In fact the criticism of film music as slavishly descriptive or manipulatively over-emotional has a history that is older than film - it had even been directed at the relatively popular operatic and concert music written by some of the ?migr? Hollywood composers themselves before they had left Europe. There, as subsequently in America, such criticism was promoted by the developing project of Modernism, whose often high-minded opposition to mass culture used polarizing language that drew, intentionally or not, upon that of gender difference. Regressive, late-romantic music, the old argument ran, was -- as women were believed to be -- emotional, irrational, and lacking in logic.

This book seeks to level the critical playing field between film music and "serious music," reflecting upon gender-related ideas about music and modernism as much as about film. Peter Franklin broaches the possibility of a history of twentieth-century music that would include, rather than marginalize, film music -- and, indeed, the scores of a number of the major Hollywood movies discussed here, like The Bride of Frankenstein, King Kong, Rebecca, Gone With The Wind, Citizen Kane and Psycho. In doing so, he brings more detailed music-historical knowledge to bear upon cinema music, often discussed as a unique and special product of film, and also offers conclusions about the problematic aspects of musical modernism and some arguably liberating aspects of "late-romanticism."

Arvustused

rich and wide-ranging, drawing illuminating connections between cinema and earlier operatic, symphonic, and artistic movements. Peter Franklin's volume demonstrates the cinema soundtrack's significance to our understanding of music as a signifying and subjective cultural force. contributing valuably to scholarship on film music and to contemporary musicology. * Catherine Haworth, Music & Letters * Franklin's strength is the scope of the book. He envisions a history of twentieth-century music that not only includes film music, but champions it ... the groundwork it lays down will aid future scholars to fill the gaps extant in relation to the study and significance of film music. * K. A. Wisniewski, Alphaville, Journal of Film and Screen Media * Highly recommended * S.C. Pelkey, Choice *

Introduction: Approaches, Problems, and the Great Divide 3(18)
Part I MUSIC INTO FILM: CRITICAL CROSS-FADES
1 Men's Musicology/Women's Films: Meanings of Late Romanticism
21(17)
2 Exploitation and Seduction: Converging Responses to Popular Opera and Film
38(24)
3 Into the Mists...Subjective Realms (and the Undoing of Men?): Film's Critique of Music
62(23)
Part II WATCHING SYMPHONIES: CAUTIONARY TALES
4 Symphonic Narratives (and Promiscuous Pleasure): Film Music and Changing Perceptions of the Symphony in the Nineteenth Century
85(30)
5 Return of the Undone Woman: Hollywood's Music and the Critical History of Late Romanticism
115(23)
6 Modernism and `the Image of the Man': Hollywood Interprets Musical Modernism
138(31)
Notes 169(18)
Index 187
Peter Franklin is Professor of Music at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St Catherine's College. He has written on Gustav Mahler and the post-romantic symphony, early twentieth-century Austrian and German opera and Hollywood film music. His publications include the books Mahler: Symphony no.3 and The Life of Mahler.