The Musical Theatre Composer as Dramatist: A Handbook for Collaboration

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Dramaturgy is at the heart of any musical theatre score, proving that song and music combined can collectively act as drama. The Musical Theatre Composer as Dramatist: A Handbook for Collaboration offers techniques for approaching a musical with the drama at the centre of the music.

Written by a working composer of British musical theatre, this original and highly practical book is intended for composers, students of musical theatre and performing arts and their collaborators. Through detailed case studies, conceptual frameworks and frank analysis, this book encourages the collaboration between the languages of music and drama. It offers a shared language for talking about music in the creation of musical theatre, as well as practical exercises for both composers and their collaborators and ways of analysing existing musical theatre scores for those who are versed in musical terminology, and those who are not.

Speaking directly to the contemporary artist, working examples are drawn from a wide range of musicals throughout Part One, before a full case study analysis of
Matilda the Musical brings all the ideas together in Part Two. Part Three offers a range of practical exercises for anyone creating new musicals, particularly composers and their collaborators.

Author(s): Rebecca Applin Warner
Publisher: Methuen Drama
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 219
City: London

Cover
Contents
Introduction
Part One Section one The first shared language: Theme
1 Finding the way in
2 Theme, story and plot
3 Theme, character and musical parameters
4 Trunk themes and branch themes
Section two The second shared language: Shape
5 Dynamic curves
6 Modes of enunciation
7 Big shapes
8 Small shapes
9 Mapping the musical
Part Two Piecing it together in analysis
10 Analysis of Everybody’s Talking About Jamie
Part Three Piecing it together in the creative process
11 Collaborative workbook
References
Bibliography
Index