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[Commlist] Call for Book Chapters: Scoring Laughs. Styles and Functions of Music in Comedy Cinema
Tue Sep 10 07:28:13 GMT 2019
Call for Book Chapters
*Scoring Laughs. Styles and Functions of Music in Comedy Cinema*
Edited by Emile Wennekes and Emilio Audissino
Historically, the examination and theorisation of the use of music in
films has addressed its presence in dramas – ‘serious’ films – while
fewer accounts are available on what types of music is utilised in
comedies and what functions it performs. As Hollywood cinema has been
the benchmark and principal terrain of inquiry, this factual unbalance
can be partly due to the scarce presence of music in the classical
Hollywood comedies – for example, the iconic 1930s screewballs –
compared to the fantasy/adventure/drama films of the same era, in which
the fathers of Hollywood music – Steiner, Korngold, Newman… – thrived
and set the foundations of the practice, and from which the first
film-music scholars launched the discipline. The lack of scholarly
attention, can also be due to the fact that comedies, having to deal
with laughter and lighter situations instead of the graver and more
existentially compelling narratives of dramas, have been seen as less
reputable objects of study, less worthy of being taken seriously by
academics – a point raised by Brett Mills in his monograph on the sitcom
(Mills 2008). Recent analyses of the music’s agency in cinema in general
have, as per tradition, preferred dramas – for example, Audissino 2017
and Lehman 2018 – while comedy is taken into consideration mostly in
focussed publications – for example, Lochner 2018 or Evans & Hayward
2016. This collection of essays aims at investigating the presence,
nature, and function of music in the comedy film from fresh
perspectives, in order to contribute to a re-evaluation of film-music
studies by casting more light on the more neglected comedic department.
By the term ‘comedy’, this book adopts a wide definition, welcoming
contributions ranging from farce, slapstick and physical comedy,
absurdist comedy, parodies, rom-com, to dark-humoured dramedies. The
music addressed is equally non-discriminative in terms of genre, style,
pre- or newly composed. The book’s focus is on cinematic comedy, thus
excluding comedy for television – given the recent contribution on this
area (Giuffre & Hayward 2017) – and it is focussed on music, not on
sound/sound design more generally. The book, also because of its Film
Studies/Musicology editorial duo, aims at adopting an interdisciplinary
approach. Three overarching and interwoven questions are subtended to
its general design:
1) What cinematic devices produce humour?
2) What musical devices produce humour?
3) In what ways do musical and cinematic devices interact
within film comedy?
Ideally, contributions are encouraged to consider all three aspects in
their reciprocal interaction. Yet, chapters are also sought that engage
specifically in questions of music theory and analysis, addressing
primarily the second question or more film-studies-oriented chapters
that tackle the other two combined questions – What cinematic devices
produce humour and how musical and cinematic devices can interact in
producing film comedy?
The book aims at covering two main areas, ‘Taxonomies and Theories’ and
‘Case Studies.’ In the former, contributions are welcomed that address
how music can employ its devices to (a) depict humour and the comic
(e.g., the use of pizzicato strings, syncopated rhythm, timbres and
colours like those of the bassoon and the tuba, the orchestra’s
‘clowns’, or the use of unusual instruments, scored surprises, parody,
etc.) or (b) how music creates humour and the comic by teaming up with
the cinematic devices (for example, the use of ‘serious’ repertoire or
original music combined with editing to create comic effects, as in
Kubrick’s sardonic use of ‘We’ll Meet Again’ at the end of Dr.
Strangelove, or the quotation of the Jaws theme in the fake-excrement
scene in Caddyshack). In the ‘Case Studies’ section, contributions are
encouraged to focus the analysis on exemplary films, composers, or
directors, as well as the use of music in national cinemas other than
Hollywood, to provide a much welcome international outlook.
Indicative areas and topics are the following (though they are not
limited to these):
- Comedy film composers (e.g. Elmer Bernstein, Theodore Shapiro, John
Morris, Mark Shaiman…)
- Non-comedy film composers writing for comedy (e.g. Jerry Goldsmith or
Hans Zimmer)
- Case studies of single films
- Music and the theories of Humour (Superiority Theory, Release Theory,
Incongruity Theory, Cue Theory…)
- Psychomusicology and humour in film music
- The musical depiction of the Comic and Humour: how musical structures
convey humour
- ‘Serious’ music for comic effects
- Repertoire music, affiliating identification, and comical effects
- Cartoon music
- Involuntary comical music (e.g., today’s perception of the classical
Mickey-Mousing in dramas)
- Musical parody and film parody
- Pop music and comedy
- Comic music in musicals
- National music, national cinemas, national comedies
- Monty Python and music (and songs)
- Music in Mel Brooks’s cinema
- Music and the Marx Brothers
- Music in the films of Louis De Funès
- Music in the films of Totò
- Music in the Carry On… films
- Comedy Italian-style and music
- Music in the films by Álex de la Iglesia
- Music in the Fantozzi film cycle
- Historical pastiche in Rustichelli’s music for L’armata Brancaleone
- Music in the films by John Landis
- Laurel and Hardy and music (songs)
- The use of original comic songs (e.g., Monty Python’s ‘Penis Song’)
- Music and the rom-com
- …
Palgrave MacMillan has expressed a strong interest for the project,
which will be featured in their series ‘Palgrave Studies in Audiovisual
Culture’ (Series Editor, K. J. Donnelly). We are preparing a formal book
proposal, and we are now looking for submissions in the form of 300-word
abstract. The final chapters should have a length in-between 5,000/6,000
words.
Timetable:
- Deadline for abstract submission: 1 November 2019.
- Communication of selected contributors: 31 December 2019.
- Delivery of the first draft: 1 September 2020.
- Communication of editorial reviews: 1 November 2020.
- Deadline for final draft: 31 December 2020.
- Publication is projected in Autumn 2021.
*Please send your 300-word abstract (also indicating an estimate of the
number of illustrations/figures you would plan to include, if any) plus
a 150-word bio *_*to both*_*(e.wennekes /at/ uu.nl) and
(emilio.audissino /at/ soton.ac.uk) by 1 November 2019.*
Editors’ Biographies
EMILE WENNEKES: Prof. dr. Emile Wennekes is Chair Professor of
Musicology: Music and Media at Utrecht University, The Netherlands. He
has written on a broad range of subjects, including a co-published book
on contemporary Dutch music available in six languages. His work has
been published, among others, by Oxford University Press, Routledge,
Michigan University Press, and Brepols. Most recently, he edited the
volume Cinema Changes: Incorporation of Jazz in the Film Soundtrack
(Brepols 2019) together with Emilio Audissino. Wennekes founded and
chairs the Study Group Music and Media (MaM) under the auspices of the
International Musicological Society. He coordinates its annual conferences.
EMILIO AUDISSINO: A film scholar and a film musicologist, Emilio
Audissino (University of Southampton) holds one PhD in History of Visual
and Performing Arts and one PhD in Film Studies. He specialises in
Hollywood and Italian cinema, and his interests are film analysis,
screenwriting, film style and technique, comedy, horror, and film sound
and music. Notably, he is the author of John Williams's Film Music
(University of Wisconsin Press, 2014), the first book-length study in
English on the composer, and Film/Music Analysis (Palgrave MacMillan,
2017), a method for audiovisual analysis that blends Neoformalism and
Gestalt Psychology. He is also an active and award-winning screenwriter.
References:
Audissino, Emilio. 2017. /Film/Music Analysis. A Film Studies Approach/.
Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan.
Evans, Mark and Hayward, Philip (eds.). 2016. /Sounding Funny: Sound and
Comedy Cinema/. Sheffield: Equinox Publishing.
Giuffre, Liz and Hayward, Philip (eds.). 2017. /Music in Comedy
Television: Notes on Laughs/. Abingdon/New York: Routledge.
Lehman, Frank. 2018. /Hollywood Harmonies. Musical Wonder and the Sound
of Cinema/. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press.
Lockner, Jim. 2018. /The Music of Charlie Chaplin/. Jefferson NC:
McFarland & Company.
Mills, Brett. 2009. /The Sitcom/. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
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