The Cultures of Film Music

HUM242-01

Start Date

01/07

Time

2pm–4pm

Format

Remote

End Date

01/17

Meeting Day

Tuesdays through Fridays

Credits

3

This online course features the following types of interaction:

  • Pre-recorded content
  • Live meetings

This course treats the evolution of film music from silent movies until the present.  It introduces students to musical syntax, the aesthetics of film music, and the means by which composers synchronize music and script to convey mood and render action vivid. Working chronologically, the course explores the increasing importance of music in cinema and how music functions as an expressive element in a film.  The course treats composers who wrote almost exclusively for the cinema (i.e., Charlie Chaplin and the contemporary John Williams), treats classical central European composers who migrated to the screen composition from wartime Europe (i.e., Korngold, Waxman, Alexandre Tansman, Bronislaw Kaper), and treats composer-director/producer collaborations such as Eisenstein-Prokofiev, Rota-Fellini/Visconti, and others. The course additionally treats the role of music from Morocco, India, China, and Japan in world cinema. Two term papers are assigned, one dealing with a composer-director partnership, the second treating the function of score in a major, iconic film such as Gone with the Wind. The textbook is Mervyn Cooke’s A History of Film Music.[Formerly titled Film Music]

This class uses the ZOOM platform. In addition to scheduled zoom meetings, course includes individual remote meetings with the instructor.

Paul Bempéchat

Paul Andre Bempéchat holds a DMA (Piano/Musicology) from Boston University, a Diplôme d’Etudes Approfondies (M.Phil.) (Musicology and Comparative Literature) from Université de Paris Sorbonne, an MMus (Piano) from the Juilliard School, NY, and an MMus (Piano) and BMus (Piano) from the Manhattan School of Music. He has taught extensively throughout North America and Europe at … Read more