ebook img

Composing for the Cinema: The Theory and Praxis of Music in Film PDF

310 Pages·2013·2.2 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Composing for the Cinema: The Theory and Praxis of Music in Film

Composing for the Cinema The Theory and Praxis of Music in Film Ennio Morricone and Sergio Miceli TranslatedbyGillian B.Anderson LessonstranscribedbyRitaPaganiandeditedbyLauraGallenga THESCARECROWPRESS,INC. Lanham•Boulder •NewYork•Toronto•Plymouth,UK 2013 PublishedbyScarecrowPress,Inc. AwhollyownedsubsidiaryofRowman&Littlefield 4501ForbesBoulevard,Suite200,Lanham,Maryland20706 www.rowman.com 10ThornburyRoad,PlymouthPL67PP,UnitedKingdom Copyright©2013byScarecrowPress Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthisbookmaybereproducedinanyformorbyany electronicormechanicalmeans,includinginformationstorageandretrievalsystems, withoutwrittenpermissionfromthepublisher,exceptbyareviewerwhomayquote passagesinareview. BritishLibraryCataloguinginPublicationInformationAvailable LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Morricone,Ennio. [Comporreperilcinema.English] Composingforthecinema:thetheoryandpraxisofmusicinfilm/EnnioMorriconeandSergio Miceli;translatedbyGillianB.Anderson. pages;cm Translationof:Morricone,Ennio.Comporreperilcinema,2001. Includesbibliographicalreferencesandindex. ISBN978-0-8108-9240-8(cloth:alk.paper)--ISBN978-0-8108-9241-5(pbk.:alk.paper)--ISBN 978-0-8108-9242-2(electronic) 1.Motionpicturemusic--Instructionandstudy.2.Composition(Music)I.Miceli,Sergio,1944-II. Anderson,GillianB.,1943-III.Title. MT64.M65M67132013 781.5'4213--dc23 2013024914 TMThepaperusedinthispublicationmeetstheminimumrequirementsofAmerican NationalStandardforInformationSciencesPermanenceofPaperforPrintedLibrary Materials,ANSI/NISOZ39.48-1992. PrintedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica TothestudentsofthecoursesatSiena,Basel,andFiesole Contents Translator’sNote vii GillianB.Anderson Editor’sNote ix LauraGallenga Acknowledgments xi Abbreviations xiii 1 Introduction:TheComposerintheCinema 1 2 AudiovisualAnalysis—Part1 11 3 ProductionProcedures 53 4 AudiovisualAnalysis—Part2:ElementsfortheDefinitionofa Film-MusicalDramaturgy 73 5 PremixandFinalMix:TheRecordingandSoundDesign 129 6 CompositionalElements:Timbre,UseofThemes, CharacteristicStylisticFeatures,andCombinationsofStyles 163 7 QuestionsandAnswers 217 Appendix1:ComposingfortheCinema:AManifesto 249 Appendix2:WritingfortheCinema:AspectsandProblemsofa CompositionalActivityofOurTime 253 v vi Contents Filmography 261 Bibliography[to1999] 271 Index 277 AbouttheAuthorsandTranslator 295 Translator’s Note Gillian B. Anderson Withalmostfourhundredscorestohiscredit,EnnioMorriconeisoneofthe most prolific and influential film composers working today. In movie after movie his listeners come away with the conviction that he has achieved something special, and this is a conviction shared by composers, scholars, and fans alike. For all those who have wondered how he does it, these compositionlessonswillexplainalot.Theyaredesignedforcomposers,but Morricone’sexpositionsareeasytounderstandandfascinatingeventothose without any musical training. To those with a musical background, they are of course even more profound. He discusses his relationship with directors like Leone, Pontecorvo, Pasolini, Petri, Scott, Beatty,Tornatore, the Taviani brothers,Zeffirelli, Joanou,andJoffé, analyzes someof hisownscores,and revealsmotivations that havenot beentakeninto accountin cinemastudies, for the spaghetti western, for example. He describes recording session tech- niques and technology and many other specifics of his profession as a film composer. Some things are especially noteworthy. Although Morricone’s tunes are famous, he is not interested in melody per se. While giving the average spectatorsomethingtofollow,hetriestowritemusicthatrevealstheperson- alityoftheplayersandthecharacterofthedrama.Hetriestocomposemusic thatisnotjustdescriptiveofwhatisalreadycommunicatedbytheimageand thatmaintainsitsowninternallogic.Whiledoingwhatthedirectorwants,he tries to addsomethingthat only themusiccan. Heispassionateaboutmusi- calexpression,enteringandexitingcarefullytomaximizethemusic’seffect, creating dynamic changes by the addition and subtraction of instruments, relying on implicit sync points as often as possible, doing all the orchestra- tionshimselfsothattheorchestralcolorsandemphasisthathewantswillbe realized. He always sets himself some purely musical challenge so that he vii viii Translator’sNote willnotfeellikeamereartisan/servantofthedirectorbutanartistinhisown right. Moreover, as Sergio Miceli points out, frequently Morricone uses the music as a force for redemption. These and many other particulars combine toexplainwhyhismusicalwaysseemstobedoingsomethingspecial,butin theendheinsiststhatthereisnoone“right”or“correct”solutionforafilm’s score. Hiscolleague,musicologistSergioMiceli,isapioneerinthefieldoffilm music.Althoughmostprofessionalfilmcomposersanalyzemoviesintuitive- ly, beginners, nonmusicians, and professionals alike will benefit from his well-defined,rigorousformalanalyses.Micelidescribesmanyofthesignsor signals that a director, cameraperson, scenery designer, costumer, actor, sounddesigner,andscriptwriterleaveinafilm.Acomposermusttakethese into accountwhendecidinghowto setthefilmto music. Micelishowshow differentkindsofpreexistingmusiccauseonetoreadthesamescenediffer- ently. He analyzes a number of films according to his system of levels, thereby describing a variety of musical solutions to many different kinds of film, and he even shows how sound design can be analyzed. As they have worked together for many years and do not always agree, Morricone and Miceliareshowntointeractduringtheirlessonstoourmutualbenefit. This text is a transcription of lessons delivered live. Although we cannot run the films or play the recordings that were used, where possible I have added information about DVDs, videotapes, and excerpts on YouTube so that thereader canrun theactualexamples andlistento andwatchthefilms being discussed. In this way one can partially reconstitute the original live lessons. IwouldliketothanktheFilmMusicFoundationforitssupportatanearly stage of the work of translation and the University of Illinois Press, which published excerpts from chapter 4 in Music and the Moving Image, volume 4,number2(Summer2011),pages1–29.Finally,IwouldliketothankLidia Bagnoli for her help and also Mario Militello of the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia. Editor’s Note Laura Gallenga This handbook was Ennio Morricone’s idea. The text was transcribed and assembled from diverse recordings made during the film music seminars conductedbyMorriconeandSergioMicelibetween1991and2000.1Tothe transcriptionof therecorded materialMiceliaddedmusicalsketches, graph- ics, and various notes and remarks he had accumulated over the years from both teachers.2 Miceli and the editor have performed the complex work of confronting and choosing between the different versions of the same theme from different editions of the seminar and in fact have created an ideal reconstruction that is a synthesis of lessons actually delivered over many years. Asforthestructureoftheseminarandthereforethebook,itisimportant toemphasizethatthepartstreatedpredominantlybyMorriconecontaincon- cepts expressed by Miceli, and vice versa. In the parts closer to his compe- tence,MicelirefersoftentothethemestouchedonbyMorricone.Therefore, a selective and fragmented lecture would have restored neither the sense of the original lessons nor the thoughts of each teacher, as the work was based on alternation, exchange, integration, and the superimposition of the contri- butions. Inevitablywehavehadto omit theanalyticalexercisesperformedbythe seminarparticipantsandthediscussionspertainingtothestudents’composi- tional attempts. Their voices, however, are present in chapter 7, “Questions and Answers,” a radical selection of the numerous questions asked of the professors during the different editions of the seminar. Further, by Miceli’s expresswish,hishistoricalcompendiumofmusicforfilm,focusedaboveall onthesilentfilmperiodandintendedasageneratorofpersistentdramaturgi- calmodels,hasbeenomittedinthistranscription. ix

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.