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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: David Burnand , Miguel Mera , Professor Derek B. Scott , Professor Lori BurnsPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Edition: New edition Weight: 0.340kg ISBN: 9780754636595ISBN 10: 0754636593 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 28 September 2006 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsContents: Introduction, Miguel Mera and David Burnand; Per aspera ad astra and back again: film music in Germany from 1927 to 1945, Reimar Volker; Music, people and reality: the case of Italian neo-realism, Richard Dyer; Contemporary Spanish film music: Carlos Saura and Pedro Almodóvar, Kathleen M. Vernon and Cliff Eisen; Music as a satirical device in the Ealing Comedies, Kate Daubney; Screen playing: cinematic representations of classical music performance and European identity, Janet K. Halfyard; Outing the synch: music and space in the French heritage film, Phil Powrie; Seán Ó Riada and Irish post-colonial film music: George Morrison's Mise Éire, David Cooper; Angel of the air: Popol Vuh's music and Werner Herzog's films, K.J. Donnelly; Modernity and a day: the functions of music in the films of Theo Angelopoulos, Miguel Mera; Preisner-Kieslowski: the art of synergetic understatement in Three Colours: Red, Jon Paxman; 'The rhythm of the night': reframing silence, music and masculinity in Beau Travail, Heather Laing; Scoring This Filthy Earth, David Burnand; Bibliography; Index.Reviews'As we stand on the cusp of the next generation of film music studies, we are watching a gradual shift from the general to the specific. European Film Music is a volume poised profitably between the foundational work of reconstructing historical context and establishing technical means and aesthetic principles; and the refining work of specific industrial and creative practice, as well as the more subtle but perhaps more profound workings of music about identity in individual films and across national cinemas. The topics range from a survey of the lot of the film composer in German early sound cinema to Krautrock and the New German Cinema of Werner Herzog; from the specific political climates of Spain and Ireland to the personal relationship between a composer and a director; from the people of postwar Italy to the imagined landscapes of France's past. These provocative essays fill in detail and open up new paths as we begin to explore the sketchily mapped terrain of music and film.' Robynn J. Stilwell, Georgetown University, Washington, DC 'Impressively ambitious and concise, these essays offer many starting places for discussions about film music and cultural theory in European cinema. ... A solid addition to the Ashgate Popular and Folk Music Series, this book will be particularly valuable for music scholars ... Recommended.' Choice '... I give an appreciative welcome to this compendium of 12 essays taking a fresh, revealing and often engagingly provocative look at the multiple traditions and varied sets of assumptions that have informed European film music over the past three-quarters of a century... [this book] will be of interest both to committed film buffs and to anyone concerned with the development of European music itself during the cinematic century.' Classical Music "'As we stand on the cusp of the next generation of film music studies, we are watching a gradual shift from the general to the specific. European Film Music is a volume poised profitably between the foundational work of reconstructing historical context and establishing technical means and aesthetic principles; and the refining work of specific industrial and creative practice, as well as the more subtle but perhaps more profound workings of music about identity in individual films and across national cinemas. The topics range from a survey of the lot of the film composer in German early sound cinema to Krautrock and the New German Cinema of Werner Herzog; from the specific political climates of Spain and Ireland to the personal relationship between a composer and a director; from the people of postwar Italy to the imagined landscapes of France's past. These provocative essays fill in detail and open up new paths as we begin to explore the sketchily mapped terrain of music and film.' Robynn J. Stilwell, Georgetown University, Washington, DC 'Impressively ambitious and concise, these essays offer many starting places for discussions about film music and cultural theory in European cinema. ... A solid addition to the ""Ashgate Popular and Folk Music Series,"" this book will be particularly valuable for music scholars ... Recommended.' Choice '... I give an appreciative welcome to this compendium of 12 essays taking a fresh, revealing and often engagingly provocative look at the multiple traditions and varied sets of assumptions that have informed European film music over the past three-quarters of a century... [this book] will be of interest both to committed film buffs and to anyone concerned with the development of European music itself during the cinematic century.' Classical Music" Author InformationMiguel Mera is Lecturer in the Centre for Screen Music Studies, Royal College of Music, UK. David Burnand is Head of Music Technology and Director of the Centre for Screen Music Studies at the Royal College of Music, UK. Miguel Mera, David Burnand, Reimar Volker, Richard Dyer, Carlos Saura, Pedro Almodovar, Kathleen M. Vernon, Cliff Eisen, Kate Daubney, Janet K. Halfyard, Phil Powrie, David Cooper, K.J. Donnelly, Miguel Mera, Jon Paxman, Heather Laing. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |