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[Commlist] Music, Sound, and the Moving Image: audiovisual essays as videographic film criticism

Tue Aug 22 11:34:53 GMT 2023


The editors of /Music, Sound, and the Moving Image <https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/journal/msmi>/ (/MSMI/) are delighted to announce a new initiative: the publication of double-anonymous peer-reviewed audiovisual essays in a *free to read* and audioview format.

We hear from them how this ground-breaking initiative came about, as they also invite contributions in this format for publication in future issues.

/MSMI/ is the first international scholarly journal devoted to the study of the interaction between music and sound in moving image media, including film, television, music video, advertising, computer games, mixed-media installation, digital art, live cinema, et alia.

The editors of /MSMI/ invite scholars at all stages of their career or study to submit work that is themed around the relationship between music, sound, and the moving image, in line with the remit of this journal. In our recent issues, we began the new initiative of including audiovisual contributions, which are being published alongside written open-access components on the journal’s website. The written statement (250–500 words) accompanying the audiovisual essay is also being published in the pages of the journal with a link to the audiovisual work.

Submitted audiovisual works to the journal have been double-anonymous peer-reviewed, and we will continue to do so. Unless there is a voice-over that gives away the identity of the maker, the process will involve reviewing work with no other personal identifiers. To this end, we invite submissions with no identifying credits attached to the work. As far as we are aware, /MSMI /will be the first journal to offer such an approach in what has become a rapidly growing field of videographic film criticism.

This initiative has come about due to the specialisations within the editorial team. Both Neepa Majumdar and Liz Greene make audiovisual essays. Majumdar is a co-editor of the prestigious journal /[in]Transition/ and Greene has guest edited special issues of /Necsus/ on sound and music for screen media. We envision each future issue of the journal to contain at least one audiovisual essay, in addition to the usual three written essays and book reviews section, but there are already plans in place for themed and guest-edited audiovisual essay issues of the journal.

– *Editors:
*Ben Winters, The Open University
Neepa Majumdar, University of Pittsburgh
Liz Greene, Liverpool John Moores University

*Submit your work*

If you are interested in submitting this type of work to the journal, please take a look at our submission guidelines <https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/pb-assets/documents/Journals/msmi_styleguide-1678789824.pdf> and get in touch with the editors of the journal at (msmijournal /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(msmijournal /at/ gmail.com)>.

*Audiovisual Essays*

**

*Video Essay: Footsteps*

By *Evelyn Kreutzer *
MSMI Volume 16.2

/“Due in part to Hitchcock’s careful, hierarchical approach to sound balance, and perhaps also to historical and technological conventions in sound recording and mixing as well as trends in shoe manufacturing and fashion, the sounds of Cary Grant’s, Tipi Hedren’s, and James Stewart’s heels seemed to produce more distinct and/or affirmative sounds than those of my own world and time, and they became attached to my Ur-fascination with cinema’s ability to capture and replay a moment in time”./

  * EVELYN KREUTZER
//

Watch for free > <https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/10.3828/msmi.2022.7>

*Video Essay: Insincere Inclusion? Ignorant Appropriation? A Symphony Orchestra Plays South Indian Film Music*

By  Sureshkumar P. Sekar
MSMI Volume 17.1

/“ I kept thinking about the meaning lost in translation, both in Hindi dialogues and lyrics and English subtitles. The meaning of the spoken word was not the only element that was lost in translation; some of the meaning of the score was also lost. Melodic parts that were played with traditional Indian instruments in the film’s recorded score were reproduced on stage with non-Indian instruments. This caused the film/music to lose some of its cultural specificity and therefore its syncretic affectivity”./

  * SURESHKUMAR P. SEKAR
//

Watch for free > <https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/10.3828/msmi.2023.4>

*Sign up to receive new issue alerts*

To sign up to table of contents alerts from /MSMI /and receive a notification when new issues are published, visit the /MSMI/ home page <https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/journal/msmi> and click the ‘sign up to TOC alerts’ button.


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