Description

Book Synopsis
As perhaps the most studied film movement in cinematic history, the French New Wave has been analysed and criticised, romanticised and mythologised, raising the question of whether it is possible to write anything new about this period. Yet there are still gaps in the scholarship, and the study of music in New Wave films is one of the most striking.
Listening to the French New Wave offers the first detailed study of the music and composers of French New Wave cinema, arguing for the need to re-hear and thus reassess this important period in film history. Combining an ethnographic approach with textual and score-based analysis, the author challenges the idea of the New Wave as revolutionary in all its facets by revealing traditional approaches to music in many canonical New Wave films. However, musical innovation does have its place in the New Wave, particularly in the films of the marginalised Left Bank group. The author ultimately brings to light those few collaborations that engaged with the ideology of adopting contemporary music practices for a contemporary medium.
Drawing on archival material and interviews with New Wave composers, this book re-tells the story of the French New Wave from the perspective of its music.

Trade Review
«For film scholars and students, this volume can add a layer of nuanced sophistication to any reading of New Wave cinema»
(Kim Harrison, H-France Review, Vol.15, no.124)

«McMahon navigates her way effectively through the complex patterns of collaboration between filmmakers and composers, showing a clear grasp of the technical aspects of the process, and provides a very satisfying overview of an extremely rich period of French cinematic and musical creation.»
(Peter Hawkins, French Studies, Vol. 69, no. 3, July 2015).

Table of Contents
Contents: Music and Cinema in Postwar Paris: A Cultural History – New Wave, New Music? Film Music Collaborations on the Right Bank – The French New Wave: A Musical Revolution? – Musicalising Moving Photographs: The Early Film Music of Agnès Varda – Musical ‘Madeleines’ in the Early Cinematic Essays of Chris Marker – Alain Resnais: ‘Auteur Mélomane’.

Listening to the French New Wave: The Film Music

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    A Paperback / softback by Wendy Everett, Axel Goodbody, Orlene Denice McMahon

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 21/03/2014
      ISBN13: 9783034317504, 978-3034317504
      ISBN10: 3034317506

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      As perhaps the most studied film movement in cinematic history, the French New Wave has been analysed and criticised, romanticised and mythologised, raising the question of whether it is possible to write anything new about this period. Yet there are still gaps in the scholarship, and the study of music in New Wave films is one of the most striking.
      Listening to the French New Wave offers the first detailed study of the music and composers of French New Wave cinema, arguing for the need to re-hear and thus reassess this important period in film history. Combining an ethnographic approach with textual and score-based analysis, the author challenges the idea of the New Wave as revolutionary in all its facets by revealing traditional approaches to music in many canonical New Wave films. However, musical innovation does have its place in the New Wave, particularly in the films of the marginalised Left Bank group. The author ultimately brings to light those few collaborations that engaged with the ideology of adopting contemporary music practices for a contemporary medium.
      Drawing on archival material and interviews with New Wave composers, this book re-tells the story of the French New Wave from the perspective of its music.

      Trade Review
      «For film scholars and students, this volume can add a layer of nuanced sophistication to any reading of New Wave cinema»
      (Kim Harrison, H-France Review, Vol.15, no.124)

      «McMahon navigates her way effectively through the complex patterns of collaboration between filmmakers and composers, showing a clear grasp of the technical aspects of the process, and provides a very satisfying overview of an extremely rich period of French cinematic and musical creation.»
      (Peter Hawkins, French Studies, Vol. 69, no. 3, July 2015).

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Music and Cinema in Postwar Paris: A Cultural History – New Wave, New Music? Film Music Collaborations on the Right Bank – The French New Wave: A Musical Revolution? – Musicalising Moving Photographs: The Early Film Music of Agnès Varda – Musical ‘Madeleines’ in the Early Cinematic Essays of Chris Marker – Alain Resnais: ‘Auteur Mélomane’.

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