The aims of this research project are to 1) historicize the Classical Hollywood orchestra, and 2) interrogate the cultural significations of the orchestral sound that Hollywood both deployed and helped to form.
tagged classical_music_in_movies cultural_history fantasia film_history film_music highbrow_lowbrow
by dkelly
...on 07-JUN-06
The aims of this research project are to 1) historicize the Classical Hollywood orchestra, and 2) interrogate the cultural significations of the orchestral sound that Hollywood both deployed and helped to form.
tagged classical_music_in_movies coming_of_sound cultural_history film_history film_music highbrow_lowbrow
by dkelly
...on 29-APR-06
Sklar, Robert. . Movie-made America : a cultural history of American movies / Robert Sklar. [0394721209 ] New York : Vintage Books, 1976, c1975.
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN1993.5.U6 S53 1976
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.
belongs to cinema and orchestra ann. project
tagged cultural_history film_history highbrow_lowbrow by dkelly ...on 28-APR-06
tagged cultural_history film_history highbrow_lowbrow by dkelly ...on 28-APR-06



