Easy Listening and Film Scoring 1948-78

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jack Curtis Dubowsky
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
William H. Rosar

This chapter’s ‘post-mortem’ of the Herrmann-Hitchcock collaboration focusses on what occurred between the two men during the fateful sessions in which Hitchcock fired Herrmann when he was dissatisfied with what the composer was developing for the film. However, the chapter searches more broadly for reasons why the partnership broke down, including Hitchcock’s philosophies about film scoring and exploring the history of the working relationship between the two men, looking in particular at the process of spotting and scoring Psycho that caused such friction and created a precedent for what happened on Torn Curtain, albeit with a very different outcome.


2018 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 368-396
Author(s):  
Gina Bombola

In the early 1940s Aaron Copland cultivated an identity as an authority on film composition through public lectures, interviews, and his own film scores. Championing film music’s potential as a serious art form, Copland sought to show Hollywood that film composers could branch out from the romantic and post-romantic aesthetics that infused contemporary soundtracks and write in a more modern, even American, style. During the 1940s the film industry was already embracing an abundance of new production styles, techniques, and genres that fostered innovation in the development of cinematic musical codes. When Copland returned to Hollywood in 1948 to score William Wyler’s psychological melodrama The Heiress (1949), he chose to take on a set of new challenges. Copland attempted to discover a new idiom for love music, on the one hand, and began to use leitmotifs as a structural device, on the other. Copland’s experience with The Heiress opens a space in which to reassess his opinions about appropriate film-scoring techniques as well as his public endorsement of film composition. His perspectives on film composition—as demonstrated in his writings, correspondence, and film scores as well as in interviews and reviews of his film music—reveal a tension between the composer’s artistic sensibilities and his attitude toward the commercialism of film music. Indeed he maintained a more ambivalent attitude toward cinematic composition than he publically professed. Understood in this context, Copland’s scoring decisions in The Heiress reflect a turn away from the Americana of Rodeo (1942) and Appalachian Spring (1944) and the Russian-themed score of The North Star (1943), as he sought to refashion his identity as a composer in the post-war years.


Author(s):  
John Caps

This chapter details Mancini's return to television. Mancini was offered his own TV series, to be called The Mancini Generation, on which he would discuss and demonstrate film music to a syndicated audience. Undertaking the series was a colossal commitment. The music materials were drawn from his whole backlog of arrangements alongside some new charts, but in addition to the musical rehearsals there were camera rehearsals and host-segment preparations all of which were shot together during one four-week period and then sliced up for insertion into the shows. Unique to each show was a sequence during which Mancini invited one college student enrolled in a film course at some university across the country to take a past Mancini recording and conceive, shoot, and edit an experimental film based on the music. The short films, then, were shown on the program, and Mancini used the opportunity to push support for film and film-scoring study courses in schools of the future. The Mancini Generation was eventually seen on 150 stations nationwide and also led to an RCA album sporting the series title, his first jazz-pop album since the 1960s.


Los Romeros ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 248-255
Author(s):  
Walter Aaron Clark

As Angel’s solo career gained momentum, he found it increasingly difficult to manage his commitments to the quartet, especially given his interests in conducting, acting, and film scoring. Pepe also had a flourishing solo career, but Columbia Management was able to avoid conflicts in his schedule, something Angel’s solo agency, International Creative Management, could not do. In addition, audiences and managers fostered a sort of competition between the two virtuosos, to see which could outperform the other. By 1990, the personal and professional conflicts in the quartet resulted in Angel striking out on his own; however, Celin’s son Celino took his place, thus saving the quartet.


2020 ◽  
pp. 135-175
Author(s):  
Landon Palmer

Chapter 4 focuses on the first decade of David Bowie’s feature screen career in order to examine the changing industrial and aesthetic relationships of narrative feature filmmaking to popular music between the 1970s and 1980s. Using six of Bowie’s starring feature film roles between 1976 and 1986, this chapter explores broadening nonmusical roles for rock stars onscreen. Such casting was made possible in a context in which rock music had become normalized on film soundtracks, absent the rock star’s onscreen performance. This chapter draws connections across the economic and aesthetic relations of popular music and cinema from the popularization of the composite score in the 1970s (that is, film scoring with popular songs rather than orchestral music) to the synergistic organization of film and music industries in the 1980s, demonstrating how composite scoring set the stage for synergy organized around MTV. In this context, rock stars’ screen performances became less tied to the previous types of roles explored in this volume: composite scoring and synergy both expanded and standardized the nondiegetic prominence of rock music within film, and such practices meant that the industrial imperatives that constitute rock stars’ relationships to film no longer necessitated those stars’ onscreen performances of music. Analyzing how his dramatic and musical film performances intersected with his rock star image, this chapter explores Bowie’s variegated screen roles in terms of how rock stars’ industrial and textual functions no longer required cogent alignment.


2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 311-337 ◽  
Author(s):  
NATHAN PLATTE

AbstractIn many histories of American film music, Max Steiner's score forKing Kong(1933) marks a new era by establishing norms in original, symphonic underscoring that would dominate Hollywood for decades.Kong's reign, however, eclipses diverse approaches to underscoring practiced at studios before and after its release. In this study, I compare the methods of Max Steiner at RKO and Nathaniel Finston at Paramount to show how both influenced film music implementation and discourse in the years leading up toKong. Steeped in the practices of silent cinema, Finston championed collaborative scoring and the use of preexistent music in films likeFighting Caravans(1931). Steiner preferred to compose alone and placed music strategically to delineate narrative space in films, as inSymphony of Six Million(1932), a technique he adapted for mediating exotic encounters in island adventure films precedingKong. Although press accounts and production materials show that Steiner and Finston's methods proved resilient in subsequent years,Kong's canonic status has marginalized Finston's role and threatens to misdirect appraisals of Steiner's other work. Considering Finston's practices at Paramount alongside Steiner's pre-Kongscores at RKO illuminates the limitations of using onlyKongas a model, and shows that Finston's perspective on film scoring in the early 1930s provides a corrective balance for understanding film musicians’ work before and afterKong.


Notes ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 529
Author(s):  
Robert Wykes ◽  
Fred Karlin ◽  
Rayburn Wright

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