Music in Films on the Middle Ages

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Author_John Haines
Black Knight
Brother Sun
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Church Tower Bell
Die Nibelungen
Disney Company
Early Music
Early Music Ensemble
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Face Punch
Film
Golden Bell
Horn Call
Knight's Tale
Knight’s Tale
Medieval
Medieval Chant
Medieval Cinema
Medieval Movies
Middle Ages
Music
Notre Dame De Paris
Orchestral Underscore
Pange Lingua
Quo Vadis
Research
Riding Warrior
Robin Hood
Sister Moon
Tournament Scene
Trumpet Fanfare
Victimae Paschali Laudes
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415824125
  • Weight: 320g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Nov 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book explores the role of music in the some five hundred feature-length films on the Middle Ages produced between the late 1890s and the present day. Haines focuses on the tension in these films between the surviving evidence for medieval music and the idiomatic tradition of cinematic music. The latter is taken broadly as any musical sound occurring in a film, from the clang of a bell off-screen to a minstrel singing his song. Medieval film music must be considered in the broader historical context of pre-cinematic medievalisms and of medievalist cinema’s main development in the course of the twentieth century as an American appropriation of European culture. The book treats six pervasive moments that define the genre of medieval film: the church-tower bell, the trumpet fanfare or horn call, the music of banquets and courts, the singing minstrel, performances of Gregorian chant, and the music that accompanies horse-riding knights, with each chapter visiting representative films as case studies. These six signal musical moments, that create a fundamental visual-aural core central to making a film feel medieval to modern audiences, originate in medievalist works predating cinema by some three centuries.

John Haines is Professor of Music History and Medieval Studies at the University of Toronto, Canada.

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