Music, Authorship, Narration, and Art Cinema in Europe: 1940s to 1980s

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Music, Authorship, Narration, and Art Cinema in Europe: 1940s to 1980s investigates the function of music in European cinema after the Second World War up to the fall of the Berlin wall, a period when composers and directors embraced experimentation. Through analyses of music and sound in a wide range of iconic films from across Europe, the essays in this book provide a nuanced reconsideration of three core themes: auteur theory, art house film, and national cinema.

Chapters written by an international array of contributors focus on case studies of music in the cinema of Carlos Saura, Jean-Pierre Melville, the Polish School, and Romanian directors, as well as collaborations between directors and composers, including Michelangelo Antonioni and Giovanni Fusco, Federico Fellini and Nino Rota, Leo Arnshtam and Dmitry Shostakovich, and Peter Greenaway and Michael Nyman. The contributors shift the emphasis from a director-centered view to the working relationship between director and composer, and from the visual component to the sonic aspects of these films, without ignoring the close correlation between soundtrack and visual elements.

Enriching our understanding of the complex, intertwined nature of authorship in film, the role of film music, and sound, nation-state and art cinema, and European cinematic history, this volume offers a valuable addition to research across music and film studies.

Author(s): Michael Baumgartner, Ewelina Boczkowska
Series: Music and Sound on the International Screen
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 249
City: New York

Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Contents
Contributors
Introduction
PART I: Cinematic Collaborations and the Reevaluation of the Auteur Style with Music
1. Music as a Sonic Enabler: Jean-Pierre Melville’s Film Adaptation of Jean Cocteau’s Les enfants terribles
2. Palimpsest, Mediation, Déjà entendu-Effect: The Musical Dramaturgy of Federico Fellini and Nino Rota’s La dolce vita
3. Michael Nyman and the Development of an Art House Musical Aesthetic
PART II: Music and Narration: The Meaning beyond the Text
4. Shostakovich, Arnshtam, and the Sound of the Cinematic Soviet Heroine
5. Michelangelo Antonioni’s Il grido, Its Music, and the Pain of Living
PART III: Music as Cinematic Metaphor in a Repressed Political System
6. A Taste of Freedom behind Closed Doors: Romanian Film Music before the Fall of Communism, 1955–85
7. Echoes of Catastrophe: Music in Films of the Polish School
8. The Soundtrack of the “Uncanny”: Music and Repetition in Carlos Saura’s Ana y los lobos and Cría cuervos
Index