Music of the Americas Study Group

Abstracts for January 16, 2004

 

Prof. Mark Clague: Aaron Copland and the Aesthetics of Hollywood

After years of failing to get work for film, Aaron Copland's effective and evocative score for the 1939 rhetorical documentary The City finally earned him notice and respect on the West coast. Commissions from Hollywood quickly followed. Director Lewis Milestone hired Copland to score Of Mice and Men (1939) and Sam Wood used Copland for Our Town (1940). Although an outsider to the film industry, Copland immediately engaged with the aesthetic debates over the uses of music in narrative film. At the time, synchronized sound had been available for only a dozen years, and film music techniques were very much in the process of refinement. Copland would become one of the genre's influential thinkers. Rather than transfer his experiences in the concert hall to the silver screen, Copland treated film as a wholly new creative discipline. In the concert hall, music expressed the "soul" of the composer; in film, music served the story.

Although Copland's ideas about film music are well known, their genesis and aesthetic backstory is little appreciated, leading to a shallow understanding of Copland's filmic efforts. Copland's fundamental ideas—film musics basic functions (to express emotion, to create continuity, to serve as neutral background), the avoidance of melody, and the primacy of emotion over action—are developed in conscious opposition to the work of Hollywood's leading composers. Although he wrote complimentarily of Alfred Newman and Max Steiner, for example, Copland's own approaches attack some of their hallmark techniques, notably Wagnerian Leitmotif and musical isomorphism ("Mickey Mousing").

Given as a guest lecture for Columbia University in 1940, an unpublished talk reveals CoplandŐs initial reactions to Hollywood's prevailing "systems" of composition. The reasoning outlined here lies behind the well-known conclusions given in the "Film Music" chapter of Copland's best-selling music guidebook What to Listen For in Music. This twenty-minute paper explores the aesthetic debates informing Copland's film scoring with a focus on his music for The City and Of Mice and Men. Placing the composer in context of his Hollywood contemporaries reveals much about his personal aesthetics and suggests solutions for a possible critical edition of Copland's film music.

 

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