The vast majority of writing on film music is concentrated on Hollywood
in particular and on a canon of North American scores and films more
generally. Recent scholarship acknowledges other traditions of film scoring
but little has been written about European film music specifically.
Miguel Mera and David Burnand present a volume that redresses the
balance by exploring specific European filmic texts, composers and
approaches to film scoring that have hitherto been neglected. Films
involving British, French, German, Greek, Irish, Italian, Polish and Spanish
composers are considered in detail.
Starting from a study of the influence of propaganda on musical aesthetics
in Nazi Germany the book includes an analysis of Italian neo-realist
cinema, a consideration of the Ealing Comedies, experimental music in
contemporary. Spanish_scoring, the invocation of traditional music, the
portrayal of classical music performers, the use of space, silence and
manipulation of time, and the depiction of the processes of scoring Lm
independent film-making. Important issues that permeate all the essays
involve the working relationship of composer and director, the dialectic
between the diegetic and non-diegetic uses of music in films, the
image synergism and the levels of realism that are created by the Tele
visual mix. The book will appeal to those working in film studies, popular
music studies, musicology, media studies and cultural theory.
Author(s): Miguel Mera, David Burnand (ed.)
Publisher: Ashgate
Year: 2006
Language: English
Pages: 228
City: Hampshire
Tags: European cinema, Film music
Figures and tables vii
Music examples vill
Notes on contributors ix
General Editor’s preface xii
Introduction 1
Miguel Mera and David Burnand
1 Per aspera ad astra and back again: film music in Germany from 1927
to 1945 13
Reimar Volker
2 Music, people and reality: the case of Italian neo-realism 28
Richard Dyer
3 Contemporary Spanish film music: Carlos Saura and Pedro Almodévar 41
Kathleen M. Vernon and Cliff Eisen
4 Miusicas a satirical device in the Ealing Comedies 60
Kate Daubney
5 Screen playing: cinematic representations of classical music
performance and European identity 73
Janet K. Halfyard
6 Outing the synch: music and space in the French heritage film 86
Phil Powrie
7 Sean O Riada and Irish post-colonial film music: George Morrison’s
Mise Eire 100
David Cooper
8 Angel of the air: Popol Vuh’s music and Werner Herzog’s films 116
K.J. Donnelly
9 Modernity and a day: the functions of music in the films of Theo
Angelopoulos 131
Miguel Mera
10 Preisner—Kieslowski: the art of synergetic understatement in
Three Colours: Red 145
Jon Paxman
11 ‘The Rhythm of the Night’: reframing silence, music and masculinity
in Beau Travail 163
Heather Laing
12. Scoring This Filthy Earth 178
David Burnand
Bibliography
Index