Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter One Setting the Standard: Hollywood’s Studio System
- Chapter Two Breaking with Tradition: Copland’s Theories on Film Music
- Chapter Three Scoring Morality: Of Mice and Men (1939)
- Chapter Four Keeping It Simple: Our Town (1940)
- Chapter Five “Doing His Bit”: The North Star (1943)
- Chapter Six Sophisticated Simplicity: The Red Pony (1949)
- Chapter Seven Silence and Sound: The Heiress (1949)
- Chapter Eight Hearing the Shift: Copland’s Lasting Impact on Hollywood
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter One - Setting the Standard: Hollywood’s Studio System
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 May 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter One Setting the Standard: Hollywood’s Studio System
- Chapter Two Breaking with Tradition: Copland’s Theories on Film Music
- Chapter Three Scoring Morality: Of Mice and Men (1939)
- Chapter Four Keeping It Simple: Our Town (1940)
- Chapter Five “Doing His Bit”: The North Star (1943)
- Chapter Six Sophisticated Simplicity: The Red Pony (1949)
- Chapter Seven Silence and Sound: The Heiress (1949)
- Chapter Eight Hearing the Shift: Copland’s Lasting Impact on Hollywood
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
As Hollywood transitioned from silent to sound cinema, studios grappled with how to “realistically” incorporate the film score into a movie. Should the music remain strictly diegetic, playing only when the narrative reveals the sound's source? Or would it be appropriate to incorporate nondiegetic music that only the audience can hear? Although such concerns may seem laughable to a modern audience, throughout the 1930s, Hollywood worried that nondiegetic music would pull viewers from the narrative and make them question the music's source. Recalling the early sound era in his memoir, composer Max Steiner explained:
Many strange devices were used to introduce the music. For example, a love scene might take place in the woods, and in order to justify the music thought necessary to accompany it, a wandering violinist will be brought in for no reason at all. Or, again, a shepherd would be seen herding his sheep and playing his flute to the accompaniment of a fifty-piece symphony orchestra.
While such tactics were not uncommon in early Hollywood pictures, the need for justification subsided and nondiegetic film scores soon became convention.
Several other industry practices also developed alongside the accepted shift to nondiegetic scoring. Largely abandoning the diegetic music of the early sound era, for example, many composers employed more music, both in terms of length and orchestral size. Additionally, several leading film composers, including Erich Korngold, Max Steiner, and Alfred Newman, often wrote in a late-Romantic compositional style. They frequently employed the soaring melodic lines; full, rich sound; use of leitmotivs; and expanded harmonic language of such art music composers as Johannes Brahms, Gustav Mahler, Richard Strauss, and Richard Wagner.
There were many reasons for employing this late-nineteenth-century sound, one of the most practical being a simple continuation of what came before it. As Mervin Cooke suggested, this practice was an extension from earlier silent film scores; it is likely that the composers continued using what they knew. Additionally, Claudia Gorbman proposed the influence of cultural musical codes on the accepted Hollywood sound, explaining that “the core musical lexicon [of film] has tended to remain conservatively rooted in Romantic tonality, since its purpose is quick and efficient signification to a mass audience.”
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- Information
- Aaron Copland's Hollywood Film Scores , pp. 8 - 23Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2020