Chapter 19 - Film Music powerpoint
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Transcript Chapter 19 - Film Music powerpoint
Chapter 19 – Film Music
The rise of the symphonic film
score began in what decade?
1930s
Most film music was written first
by European composers writing in
the European-symphonic tradition.
A Realistic Film of the American
West
An early example of an American
composer writing for film can be found in
The Plow That Broke the Plains (1936).
a documentary film on drought-stricken farm
families and the aid of the federal government
filmmaker: Pare Lorentz
composer: Virgil Thomson (1896-1989)
musical Americanisms:
a Calvinist psalm tune
cowboy songs
African American blues
World War I songs
Two films about small town and big city
Aaron Copland’s music for Our Town
Leonard Bernstein’s music for On
the Waterfront
Three Career Film Composers
Max Steiner (1888-1971)
European
America (New York)
born in Vienna, Austria
worked in musical theater (frequently in Paris and London)
on and off Broadway
1924: worked on George Gershwin’s Lady Be Good! And
Jerome Kern’s Sitting Pretty
Hollywood
1929-1936: composed music for more than 130 films at RKO
Radio Pictures
King Kong (1933)
his first celebrated full-length film score
1936-1950s: worked mostly for Warner Brothers
Gone With the Wind (1939)
one of his most memorable film scores
Steiner’s musical style
- “romantic,” broad, sweeping melodies
- rooted firmly in classical principles
- largely derived from nineteenthcentury, central European models
- Richard Wagner-influenced style of
music’s dramatic functions
- use of melodies that are tied to
specific characters and themes
Bernard Hermann (1911-1975)
born in New York
studied at New York University and the Juilliard School
1934-1940: arranger and composer for CBS Radio
1941: music for Wells’ Citizen Kane
c.1955-c.1964: collaborated with Alfred Hitchcock (18991980)
music for radio dramas
collaborated with Orson Wells (1915-1985) on War of the
Worlds (1938)
The Trouble with Harry (1955)
Marnie (1964)
Psycho (1960)
many others
“The Murder” Psycho score
use of glissando in the “screaming strings”
short, repeated melodic fragments
Hermann’s musical style
“modernist”
frequent use of short melodic
fragments
What is a “cue”?
a passage of music that is written
for a specific moment in a film
Example: “The Murder” music in
Psycho
John Williams (b. 1932)
born in New York; soon moved to Los Angeles
Education
1951-1954: conducted and wrote music for the Air Force
Band
1950s: composed music for television
1960s: music for comedy films
1970s: began long musical collaboration with Steven
Spielberg
classical and jazz lessons
Juilliard School
UCLA
Jaws
Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)
Schindler’s List (1993)
1977: first of the Star Wars movies (George Lucas)
Williams’ musical style
more in the style of Steiner than
Hermann
broad, lush, nineteenth-century
approach
Wagner-like musical motives
melodies reflect characters
melodies can also change in order to
reflect character development
The Imperial March (Darth Vader’s Theme)
Star Wars: Episode V—The Empire Strikes Back
an example of how music can
project a character.
Listen for
march style
dark musical key (minor)
blaring brass instruments over
“shuddering” strings