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HITCHCOCK and Music - Printable Version +- Music Discussion (https://www.music-discussion.com) +-- Forum: Music Discussion (https://www.music-discussion.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=4) +--- Forum: Film/TV/Stage (https://www.music-discussion.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=19) +--- Thread: HITCHCOCK and Music (/showthread.php?tid=14060) |
HITCHCOCK and Music - ronPrice - 05-08-2015 HITCHCOCK and MUSIC Jack Sullivan is director of American Studies and professor of English at Rider University, New Jersey, USA. He has written[SUP]1[/SUP] a long overdue tribute to Alfred Hitchcock's musical perspicacity. Sullivan demonstrates Hitchcockâs uncanny ability to manipulate audiences not only with his striking, frightening images but also his adroit use of music, of all kinds, to heighten suspense, atmosphere and drama. He also knew when to employ silences or musical rests to maximum effect. Some of his most distinguished composers, such as Arthur Benjamin, credited him with being far more serious about music than any other director. Hitchcock was a cultured man. He had no formal music training yet was a fervent music-lover and keen concertgoer. Hitchcock came into my life, perhaps as early as 1954 with Dial âMâ For Murder, and about the same time as the Baha'i Faith also came into my family's life when I was in my late childhood.-Ron Price with thanks to [SUP]1[/SUP]Ian Laceâs review at Music Web International of Hitchcock's music, Jack Sullivan, Yale University Press, 2006. Youâd been going strong, Alfred, for thirty years before you came into my life with Dial âMâ For Murder, with Psycho and The Birds, their gripping music & their memorable sounds, now lost in my memory bank from my childhood and teens when the winter of my own life was setting in early & new values[SUP]1[/SUP] had begun to capture my mind & imagination long ago, Alfred. Over your long career[SUP]2[/SUP] you presided over more musical styles than any directors in history; ultimately you changed how we thought about film music, any film music--oh so clever. And thanks, Jack, for your discussion of Hitchcockâs music to influence the atmosphere, characterization and even storylines of his films.......Hitchcockâs relationships with composers: Bernard Herrmann, Dimitri Tiomkin, Maurice Jarr and Franz Waxman--achievement, a sign of genius; they changed the way we watched-listened to movies-yessiree. [SUP]1[/SUP] The Bahá'à Faith [SUP]2 [/SUP] From his work on a film in 1921, The Lodger, to his last in 1976, Family Plot Ron Price 14/8/'09 to 18/1/'15 --------------------------------------- end of document HITCHCOCK and Music - Jerome - 07-08-2015 Interesting post - thx Ron. And I learnt a new word - 'perspicacity' - will have to look that one up. You learn something every day. HITCHCOCK and Music - CRAZY-HORSE - 07-08-2015 Jerome Wrote:Interesting post - thx Ron. And I learnt a new word - 'perspicacity' - will have to look that one up. You learn something every day. my dad always told me "son, the day you don't learn anything new,however trivial or menial, is the day you should give up on life" I think that was a good statement,and one I live by HITCHCOCK and Music - Jerome - 07-08-2015 Very good advice! I like the part in the movie 'Frankie and Johnny' where Al Pacino talks about learning a new word every day. Makes a lot of sense to me. HITCHCOCK and Music - ronPrice - 08-08-2015 Thanks, folks, for your responses. Since the subject of learning has entered this thread I'll add a post below on that subject.-Ron ----------------------------- LEARNING Part 1: In her Charles Haskins Lecture for 2001 entitled âA Life of Learningâ Helen Vendler[SUP]1 [/SUP]outlines what her life of learning was like. Vendler is a leading American critic of poetry and has been a Professor at Harvard since 1981. She begins by describing âthe most decisive episode of her learning.â Looking back over the years since my first memory in 1947, some 60 years, I think the most decisive learning experience I had was the dawning of an intellectual enthusiasm insensibly and sensibly from the age of 15 to 18. Vendler describes what she calls âher eeriest learning experience.â The reading of Emily Dickinsonâs poetry, first in 1984 and by degrees until 1992 when I had an immersion in her work was, perhaps, my eeriest learning episode. Finally, Vendler gives us her âmost anguishing learning.â Mine was not an academic learning but was experiential-psycho-neurological and occurred first in 1963, then in 1965, again in 1968, 1979 and 1980 and was associated with my bi-polar disorder. -Ron Price with thanks to [SUP]1[/SUP]Helen Vendler, âA Life of Learning,â American Council of Learned Societies: Occasional Paper No.50. Part 2: Iâve always found it pretty full-on this learning business, consuming in one way or another right back to, what, â53, â59, â62?---idiosyncratic, patchy at times, often exhausting, always anxious in some degree. It took another fifty years: â49-â99 before the learning that came from writing was given a full-steam-head. I finally met myself in my poetry after decades of meeting students, teachers, more subjects than I could count in more towns than I care to remember. And then there were those frustrations, fears, work, ambitions, successes, failures which drained away my energy. Slowly I learned to accept my incapacities......not all was victory. There was just too much keeping me from writing poetry but, by 1992, the channels were finally opening for my particular style, for defining my particular style, linking style to personality, to my inner life, inner being and it was so peculiar, so stimulating, that I was overcome by a desire to write and write and read and read. All my later work stemmed from a compulsion, an obsession, a thirst, a mild intoxication to turn the past and the future into words, into poems in the present, in some great orgy of acquisitiveness.........And I cry inwardly: âwhat I do is me: for that I came.â Ron Price 14/3/'07 to 8/8/'15. |