Also of interest is the suggestion that some of the Silly Symphonies of the early 1930s blur boundaries between humans and animals, mechanical and organic, living and inanimate objects, master and slave, labor and play, and that such blurring had a utopian appeal. The role of sound in this blurring might prove a productive line of inquiry.
Call#: Storage: From RECORD page, use Place Request tab PN1995 .L47
Ernest Lindgren is a self-reflective and knowledgeable film lover whose views are informed by his having witnessed the transition from silent to sound films; his goal in writing “The Art of the Film” wass to provide film goers with the critical skills necessary to view film intelligently. Two chapters are of particular interest to me: “The Use of Sound,” and “Film Music.” Regarding the use of sound, Lindgren is highly critical of sound that merely duplicates the information already provided by the image. He provides a psychological argument for why the principles guiding the use of sight and sound in film are different. Also, in an approach I’ve seen no other critic use and which seems to me quite fruitful, Lindgren compares sound in literature to sound in film, quoting from Tolstoy and Dickinson in order to demonstrate the unique functioning of sound (it can be tuned out and it can represent something other than the immediate visual surroundings). Regarding music, Lindgren compares its use in silent films to its use in sound films, the latter being distinguished by its intermittency seeing as how the music was no longer the only sound present. Ultimately, good film music is film music that is “not heard,” a view Lindgren rightly claims is widely held. Lindgren again employs psychological principles in explaining the proper use of music, and though he lacks the terms diegetic and nondiegetic the distinction is an important one to him.
Lindgren illustrates all his aesthetic opinions with concrete examples from films, which not only adds immeasurably to his arguments but also provides useful information about what films were innovative in certain techniques. Interestingly, Lindgren ends the film music chapter with a discussion of poetry used in voice-overs, a discussion he put off from the sound chapter, where he also discussed voice-overs, because he thought it proper to music. The synonymy of poetry and music was operative in the middle ages, but I’ve not before encountered it in the 20th century. This is not relevant to my present purposes but is perhaps something to keep in mind for another time.
Call#: Van Pelt Library F869.H74 F75 1986
Account of choosing Rite of Spring for Fantasia (35-6) cited in Nicholas Cook's Analyzing Multimedia (174).
A social and cultural history of Hollywood in the 1940s framed as its great height followed by decline and fall. Each chapter focuses on one year, reporting political and economic conditions as backdrop for behind-the-scenes anecdotes. Relevant to my concerns is the second chapter, “Ingatherings (1940),” which discusses the influx of European artists to LA which resulted from Hitler’s rise to power. The chapter’s most extensive music-related anecdotes concern Arnold Schoenberg, Igor Stravinsky, the making of Fantasia and Dimitri Tiomkin. The author is skeptical of the veracity of insiders’ reports, viewing Hollywood as a fantasy world, an imaginary city. This circumspection applies to the composers’ stories; however, while occasionally conflicting accounts of the same events are considered, the overall picture is presented as accurate. Movie produces had specific ideas about what kind of music they wanted in their films, and treated major composers and full-time studio composers alike as hired servants. At the same time, the concentration of classical musicians in Hollywood fostered encounters and collaborations among them, prompting (non-film) compositions and recordings which otherwise might not have been produced.
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN1999.W27 D57 1994
The article by Moya Luckett, "Fantasia: Cultural Constructions of Disney's "Masterpiece," focuses on the reception of Fantasia primarily upon its initial release (1940-1) but also upon its rereleases in 1954 and 1991. Luckett adopts the approach to reception studies explicated by Janet Staiger in Interpreting Films; rather than interpreting Fantasia she "attempt[s] a historical explanation of the event of interpreting a text." Luckett examines publicity and reviews in order to ascertain what audience expectations might have been and what readings of Fantasia were in circulation. Disney positioned Fantasia as a work of high culture by presenting it as a roadshow and referring to it as a concert rather than a film. Negative critical reaction tended to come from music critics and to focus on the incompatibility of film and classical music, the former being properly experienced in a mode of distraction, the latter in one of contemplation. Luckett's interpretation is convincing; her article also provides many quotes from reviews and Disney's own publicity with relevant citations, making it useful for anyone wishing to pursue a different interpretation of the reception of Fantasia.
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML422.S76 O62
Good cultural contextualization of Stokowski's biography. A short chapter called "Film Work" discusses Stokowski's participation in The Big Broadcast of 1937, One Hundred Men and a Girl, and Fantasia. There are conflicting versions of the story of how Stokowski got involved with Disney; this one sides with the chance meeting in a restaurant story. The chapter "The Philadelphia Orchestra" illuminates Stokowski's musical values, his commitment to bringing modern music as well as the classics to the people and to exposing (i.e. educating) young people to music. I don't know whether to be amazed or suspicious of how perfectly the story of the 'Symphony of the Air' - the self-organization of NBC symphony members after the NBC Orchestra's disbandment - mirrors the movie One Hundred Men and a Girl. Likely the specifics of the story are accurate and only the author's conclusion that the symphony ultimately failed because it couldn't "secure the only man who could have given it a glorious future" is specious.
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN1590.A9 B88 2000
This history of the American audience is fascinating; the historical specificity with which it treats transformations in audience behavior and conceptions I have encountered no where else. For example, the segregation of audiences by class can be pinpointed in the 1830-40s when elites became concerned about working-class sovereignty and moved to contain its en masse expression by condemning “rowdy” audience behavior. With the advent of movies, public concerns shifted from audience behavior to the entertainment’s content, from what audiences were doing to what was being done to them. The book traces audiences for drama theater, minstrelsy, vaudeville, movies, radio and television because there is continuity between these entertainments; concerts do not participate in this lineage. As a result, mentions of music are few and far between. The Nickelodeon chapter, which discusses extensively the economic class and geographical variation of audience demographics, mentions live musical accompaniment, claiming that it was provided primarily by female pianists – a gender typing I’ve not come across in other readings – who resisted cue sheets distributed by producers after 1910. Also interesting is the practice of sing-alongs while the projector was being loaded. The chapter “Storefronts to Theaters: Seeking the Middle Class” cites the coming of sound for its effective silencing of audiences. The debate between disparagers of “canned music” and optimists about new possibilities for the dissemination of music is tantalizingly mentioned but unsatisfactorily footnoted. The chapters on radio are fascinating though only tangentially related to my concerns. They confirm that highbrow vs. lowbrow, moral uplift vs. commercialism, classical music vs. jazz were the operative binaries in the discourses around radio in the 1920-30s, and cite an interesting result from audience surveys between 1928-32 that radio programming preferences in descending order were: popular music (jazz, Tin Pan Alley and old-time [an unfortunately broad category]), comedy, drama, sports, classical music, general talk, religious, news, educational. This history demonstrates how class anxiety has constantly factored into entertainment practices and discourse across media since the mid-19th century.
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN1993.5.U6 S53 1976
Sklar argues that the development of the movies during critical years of change (industrialization, urbanization, modernization) in the social structure of America is responsible for their success in becoming the most popular and influential media of the first half of the 20th century; I would say that there is no doubt some truth to this but that it fails to recognize the role of movies in actually bringing about changes in the modern, urban social structure. The older American city, according to Sklar, juxtaposed and intermingled different income levels and occupations, while the new city segregated them. When Sklar calls the discovery of storefront movie theaters “a shocking revelation to the middle class” he paints the middle class with too broad a brushstroke; he does, however, vividly report the reaction of social reformers to the specter of entertainment and information sources unsupervised by by churches and schools. Sklar suggests that the middle-class saw censorship as a way to control the movies and to realize a desire to return to a society (a la Elizabethan) in which high culture was popular culture accessible to and enjoyed by alls social groups. This dream failed to materialize because demonopolization (the busting of the Edison Trust) of the movie industry thwarted efforts at exert complete control over movie content through censorship. The desire to make high culture popular culture factors significantly in my research interests, and while it is not Sklar’s main concern his history usefully details the movie situation within which such desire was expressed. His history covers the period from the birth of the movies to “Hollywood’s collapse” as he puts it, which coincided with the rise of television, art films and hard-core porn films.
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML2075 .M37 1997
This book is amazing; it situates its contributions to our knowledge of silent film music – which our copious – within the existing body of literature, providing a solid point of departure for all further study. Marks gives extensive consideration to the availability and state of the historical evidence, and works to piece together the surviving (often partial) scores, advertisements and reviews in order to create a more complete picture of the silent era’s musical practices then has elsewhere been achieved. Marks debunks the notion that there was a period during which anything went musically as long as it covered up the noise of the projector and compensated for the uncanny flatness of the moving image by looking at music for some of the proto-film technologies (vitascope, biograph and bioskop). The more compelling case of bioskop took place in Europe, however, and their film music practices were not immediately taken up in America. In 1909 Moving Picture World dubbed the majority of pianists inadequate movie accompaniests, and only months later Edison published its first guidelines for film accompaniment. Marks observes that the 1910-14 period has been subject to severe music scholarly neglect due to the perceived lack of evidence. Marks finds and considers numerous “special scores,” i.e. scores written specially for particular movies, that predate Birth of a Nation (1915), the oft cited “first.” Birth of a Nation gets its own chapter too, however, for it was a significant and influential achievement. Marks includes numerous facsimiles as well as transcriptions of the surviving parts/scores, and subjects them to paleographic as well as music analysis. I would say this is THE book for silent film music.
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML200.8.L7 M37 2004
2. "Making Friends with Music": Music Education in the Classroom and Concert Hall
3. "Symphonies Under the Stars": The Romance of the Hollywood Bowl
4. The Art of Pageants, Plays, and Dance
5. Leaving a Legacy: Early Recording of Indigenous, Classical, and Popular Music
6. "An Invisible Empire in the Air": Broadcasting the Classics during the Golden Age
7. Music on Film: Hollywood and the Conversion to Sound
Chapter 7 of Musical Metropolis is devoted to “Music on Film: Hollywood and the Conversion to Sound,” with the goal of demonstrating music’s vital role in creating “an atmosphere or mood in both nonanimated and animated films,” though to my mind Marcus’s argument amounts to, ‘films had music so music was vital.’ Marcus’s history of film music is concise and informative, however. Marcus shows that during the silent era most musical accompanied was drawn from preexisting European art music, and that the idea of composing music for films came only gradually. Marcus credits Warner Bros.’s 1926 The Jazz Singer, presented using Vitaphone, with “demonstrat[ing] with finality that audiences wanted to hear music on film (167). Many theaters kept their orchestras for the first few years of sound films, using them as entertainment between viewings. “In 1929 theaters were by far the largest employer of musicians in the country,” but the financial strain put on theaters by the Depression combined with sound film put an end to that.
While I find the explanation, “Because music had become an essential part of filmmaking, each of the studios formed a music department following the conversion to sound,” (168) wanting, Marcus’s account of the early music departments is informative, including figures for number of musicians employed and the typical pay around 1930. Marcus then turns to in depth biographical and musical discussions of the three leading symphonic film score writers, Max Steiner (the pioneer of letimotivc symphonic underscoring), Erich Wolfgang Korngold (the face of high-art respectability) and Alfred Newman (less educated but master of subtlety), and then to a discussion of music in animated films at Warners and Disney.
Flinn’s psychoanalytical reading of Classical Hollywood film music is fairly convincing. The article is particularly useful for its copious quotation of critics and composers from the Classical Hollywood period on music.
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML2075 .G65 2005
This is the first and only book-length musicological treatment of cartoon music. In the chapter "Classical Music and Cartoons" Goldmark argues that the pieces of classical music that are used in cartoons are characterisized by "gestural immediacy," which makes them suitable for illustration. Goldmark credits Freleng with mastering the techniques of fitting classical music to cartoons. Goldmark discusses the construction of high art vs. folk/popular music in bugs bunny shorts, and these cartoons playing out of class struggles. Goldmark observes the impossibility of taking Fantasia seriously as high art when cartoons were seen only as a form of popular entertainment. Fantasia is excpetional in the world of animated shorts as a cartoon which seeks to glorify classical music rather than tare it down. Goldmark outlins the contrast between the original Fantasia and Fantasia 2000, the latter reflecting radically different notions of the musical canon and the propriety of including popular celebrities. This is a discussion I wish Goldmark had pursued more in depth for I think the comparison is a fruitful one on which further analysis and an investigation of the making of Fantasia 2000 would shed more light. While cultural notions had changed, clearly Fantasia 2000 demonstrates some kind of commitment to classical music.
Goldmark is kind of out on a limb here with cartoon studies which has no established precedent in musicology and no body of literature to build off of or respond to. I think he opens a productive path in both musicology and film studies - and their potential union - with this book. At an absolute minimum, he provides a very useful bibliography.

