British Film Music and Film Musicals
British Film Music and Film Musicals
Description
British film music is one of the unsung stars of British culture. British cinema should be most proud of it, and yet it barely receives a mention in scholarly or popular writing. Yet during the 1930s, British-made musicals, starring actors such as George Formby and Gracie Fields, were the most popular films seen by British audiences. Any consideration of British music, or indeed of film music, could not fail to note William Walton's outstanding score for Olivier's Henry V (1944) and Malcolm Arnold's music for The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957). Yet these are never mentioned in the kind of scholarly books and histories produced in the area of 'British film' studies. This book aims to open up debate on the subject as well as map a terrain that has for a long time been lost. This book will address music in British films, both as musical scores ,in the first half of the book and as British film musicals, in the second half. Each section will start with a detailed chronological review history.
Contents
Introduction
British Film Music
Wicked Sounds and Magic Melodies: Music in Gainsborough
Melodramas
Did You Hear the One about the Irishman? Sound and Music,
Forging Ethnicity in Odd Man Out (1946)
Experimenting with Film Scores, 1967-1970
Pop Music Culture, Synergy and Songs in Films: Hardware
(1990) and Trainspotting (1996)
History of British Film Musicals
Stage to Screen: Whatever Happened to the British Musical Adaptation?
The Perpetual Busman's Holiday: Sir Cliff Richard and the British Pop Musical
The Musical Revolution: The Beatles in A Hard Day's Night
White Labels and Black Imports: Music, Assimilation and
Commerce in Absolute Beginners (1985)
9781403996732
Donnelly, K.J.
b31cebde-a9cf-48c9-a573-97782cd2a5c0
17 August 2007
Donnelly, K.J.
b31cebde-a9cf-48c9-a573-97782cd2a5c0
Donnelly, K.J.
(2007)
British Film Music and Film Musicals
,
Basingstoke, UK.
Palgrave Macmillan, 232pp.
Abstract
Description
British film music is one of the unsung stars of British culture. British cinema should be most proud of it, and yet it barely receives a mention in scholarly or popular writing. Yet during the 1930s, British-made musicals, starring actors such as George Formby and Gracie Fields, were the most popular films seen by British audiences. Any consideration of British music, or indeed of film music, could not fail to note William Walton's outstanding score for Olivier's Henry V (1944) and Malcolm Arnold's music for The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957). Yet these are never mentioned in the kind of scholarly books and histories produced in the area of 'British film' studies. This book aims to open up debate on the subject as well as map a terrain that has for a long time been lost. This book will address music in British films, both as musical scores ,in the first half of the book and as British film musicals, in the second half. Each section will start with a detailed chronological review history.
Contents
Introduction
British Film Music
Wicked Sounds and Magic Melodies: Music in Gainsborough
Melodramas
Did You Hear the One about the Irishman? Sound and Music,
Forging Ethnicity in Odd Man Out (1946)
Experimenting with Film Scores, 1967-1970
Pop Music Culture, Synergy and Songs in Films: Hardware
(1990) and Trainspotting (1996)
History of British Film Musicals
Stage to Screen: Whatever Happened to the British Musical Adaptation?
The Perpetual Busman's Holiday: Sir Cliff Richard and the British Pop Musical
The Musical Revolution: The Beatles in A Hard Day's Night
White Labels and Black Imports: Music, Assimilation and
Commerce in Absolute Beginners (1985)
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Published date: 17 August 2007
Organisations:
Film Studies
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 144637
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/144637
ISBN: 9781403996732
PURE UUID: 269b805b-5c76-4813-ab82-012d1873eae9
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Date deposited: 10 Jun 2010 09:06
Last modified: 05 Aug 2022 16:35
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