Michael Nyman and the Development of an Art House Musical Aesthetic
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review
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Michael Nyman and the Development of an Art House Musical Aesthetic. ed. / Michael Baumgartner; Ewelina Boczkowska. Vol. 1 1. ed. New York: Routledge, 2022. p. 87–112 3.
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Michael Nyman and the Development of an Art House Musical Aesthetic
AU - ap Sion, Pwyll
N1 - Pwyll ap Siôn is Professor of Music at Bangor University, Wales. Ashgate Press published his monograph on The Music of Michael Nyman in 2007, which focused on the composer’s use of borrowing and quotation. He has edited Michael Nyman: Collected Writings and co-edited The Ashgate Companion to Minimalist and Postminimalist Music(both 2013). Articles and reviews have also appeared in journals such as Soundtrack, Twentieth-Century Music and Contemporary Music Review. He writes regularly for Gramophone music magazine.
PY - 2022/12/12
Y1 - 2022/12/12
N2 - This chapter sets out by asking whether a distinct musical aesthetic exists for art house, indie, and European cinema by examining composer Michael Nyman’s collaborations with experimental film director Peter Greenaway between 1976–91.Despite music’s more elevated status in avant-garde cinema, scholars have largely avoided discussing its function within these films in any detail. Starting by situating Nyman’s compositional practice in relation to more recent explorations into film territory as composer-turned-auteur, the chapter traces a journey in the Nyman-Greenaway soundtracks from the “structuralist-objective” stance adopted in the early, experimental non-narrative A Walk Through H (1978), through more “structuralist-subjective” and “expressive-objective” approaches in The Draughtsman’s Contract (1982) and Drowning by Numbers (1988), to a kind of “expressive subjectivity” encountered in The Cook, the Thief, his Wife and her Lover (1989).The process-based design of A Walk Through H is reflected in Nyman’s soundtrack, which makes use of minimalist structures and musical systems. In The Draughtsman’s Contract, Nyman’s music parallels Mr. Neville’s paintings and their locations, but on one of the concluding scenes it is employed for its more expressive potential. Music’s emotional power is utilized still further in Drowning by Numbers, which nevertheless keeps its distance from the characters through the self-reflexive use of number games and other structuring devices, while the music in The Cook, the Thief, his Wife and her Lover is used to provoke shockingly strong emotional responses.The chapter concludes by arguing that in art cinema music has reasserted itself within the traditional understanding of the sound-image relationship—shifting from background to foreground, and thus forming an equal partner in a relationship that is at once divided while remaining coherent.
AB - This chapter sets out by asking whether a distinct musical aesthetic exists for art house, indie, and European cinema by examining composer Michael Nyman’s collaborations with experimental film director Peter Greenaway between 1976–91.Despite music’s more elevated status in avant-garde cinema, scholars have largely avoided discussing its function within these films in any detail. Starting by situating Nyman’s compositional practice in relation to more recent explorations into film territory as composer-turned-auteur, the chapter traces a journey in the Nyman-Greenaway soundtracks from the “structuralist-objective” stance adopted in the early, experimental non-narrative A Walk Through H (1978), through more “structuralist-subjective” and “expressive-objective” approaches in The Draughtsman’s Contract (1982) and Drowning by Numbers (1988), to a kind of “expressive subjectivity” encountered in The Cook, the Thief, his Wife and her Lover (1989).The process-based design of A Walk Through H is reflected in Nyman’s soundtrack, which makes use of minimalist structures and musical systems. In The Draughtsman’s Contract, Nyman’s music parallels Mr. Neville’s paintings and their locations, but on one of the concluding scenes it is employed for its more expressive potential. Music’s emotional power is utilized still further in Drowning by Numbers, which nevertheless keeps its distance from the characters through the self-reflexive use of number games and other structuring devices, while the music in The Cook, the Thief, his Wife and her Lover is used to provoke shockingly strong emotional responses.The chapter concludes by arguing that in art cinema music has reasserted itself within the traditional understanding of the sound-image relationship—shifting from background to foreground, and thus forming an equal partner in a relationship that is at once divided while remaining coherent.
KW - Michael Nyman
KW - Peter Greenaway
KW - Film studies
KW - Art House aesthetic
KW - Avant-Garde cinema
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9781138238039
VL - 1
SP - 87
EP - 112
BT - Michael Nyman and the Development of an Art House Musical Aesthetic
A2 - Baumgartner, Michael
A2 - Boczkowska, Ewelina
PB - Routledge
CY - New York
ER -