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Oxford University Press, USA

Seeing Through Music: Gender and Modernism in Classic Hollywood Film Scores

Seeing Through Music: Gender and Modernism in Classic Hollywood Film Scores

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Hollywood film music is often mocked as a disreputably applied branch of the art of composition that lacks both the seriousness and the quality of the classical or late-romantic concert and operatic music from which it derives. Its composers in the 1930s and '40s were themselves often
scornful of it and aspired to produce more 'serious' works that would enhance their artistic reputation.

In fact the criticism of film music as slavishly descriptive or manipulatively over-emotional has a history that is older than film - it had even been directed at the relatively popular operatic and concert music written by some of the émigré Hollywood composers themselves before they had left
Europe. There, as subsequently in America, such criticism was promoted by the developing project of Modernism, whose often high-minded opposition to mass culture used polarizing language that drew, intentionally or not, upon that of gender difference. Regressive, late-romantic music, the old
argument ran, was -- as women were believed to be -- emotional, irrational, and lacking in logic.

This book seeks to level the critical playing field between film music and serious music, reflecting upon gender-related ideas about music and modernism as much as about film. Peter Franklin broaches the possibility of a history of twentieth-century music that would include, rather than
marginalize, film music -- and, indeed, the scores of a number of the major Hollywood movies discussed here, like The Bride of Frankenstein, King Kong, Rebecca, Gone With The Wind, Citizen Kane and Psycho. In doing so, he brings more detailed music-historical knowledge to bear upon cinema music,
often discussed as a unique and special product of film, and also offers conclusions about the problematic aspects of musical modernism and some arguably liberating aspects of late-romanticism.


Author: Peter Franklin
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 04/01/2015
Pages: 208
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.66lbs
Size: 9.10h x 6.10w x 0.60d
ISBN: 9780190246549

About the Author

Peter Franklin is author of Mahler: Symphony No. 3, The Life of Mahler, and Reclaiming Late-Romantic Music: Singing Devils and Distant Sounds.

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