Drawn to Sound: Animation Film Music and Sonicity

Animation films are produced around the world and attract sizeable audiences and much critical acclaim. No longer marginalized in genres such as children’s or propaganda films, they are increasingly the subject of academic study. At the same time, attention has turned to the music and sound, which contribute to both the emotional impact and the narrative drive, as well as the marketing appeal, of such films. This ground-breaking volume bridges these two fields and also positions animation-film sound and music in the context of the screen and music industries. Animation experts like Paul Wells and Daniel Goldmark and film-music authorities including Philip Hayward, Ian Inglis and Janet Halfyard provide international perspectives on the history and aesthetics of music and sound in animation film.

Drawn to Sound focuses on feature-length, widely distributed films released in the period since World War II, from producers in the USA, UK, Japan and France – from Animal Farm (1954) to Happy Feet (2006), Yellow Submarine (1968) to Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005), Spirited Away (2001) and Les Triplettes de Belleville (2003). It spotlights important studios, including Disney, DreamWorks, Aardman Animation and Studio Ghibli, and composers, both those who collaborate personally with director and those whose music is used to provide period or mood atmospheres.

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Drawn to Sound: Animation Film Music and Sonicity

Animation films are produced around the world and attract sizeable audiences and much critical acclaim. No longer marginalized in genres such as children’s or propaganda films, they are increasingly the subject of academic study. At the same time, attention has turned to the music and sound, which contribute to both the emotional impact and the narrative drive, as well as the marketing appeal, of such films. This ground-breaking volume bridges these two fields and also positions animation-film sound and music in the context of the screen and music industries. Animation experts like Paul Wells and Daniel Goldmark and film-music authorities including Philip Hayward, Ian Inglis and Janet Halfyard provide international perspectives on the history and aesthetics of music and sound in animation film.

Drawn to Sound focuses on feature-length, widely distributed films released in the period since World War II, from producers in the USA, UK, Japan and France – from Animal Farm (1954) to Happy Feet (2006), Yellow Submarine (1968) to Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005), Spirited Away (2001) and Les Triplettes de Belleville (2003). It spotlights important studios, including Disney, DreamWorks, Aardman Animation and Studio Ghibli, and composers, both those who collaborate personally with director and those whose music is used to provide period or mood atmospheres.

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Drawn to Sound: Animation Film Music and Sonicity

Drawn to Sound: Animation Film Music and Sonicity

Drawn to Sound: Animation Film Music and Sonicity

Drawn to Sound: Animation Film Music and Sonicity

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Overview

Animation films are produced around the world and attract sizeable audiences and much critical acclaim. No longer marginalized in genres such as children’s or propaganda films, they are increasingly the subject of academic study. At the same time, attention has turned to the music and sound, which contribute to both the emotional impact and the narrative drive, as well as the marketing appeal, of such films. This ground-breaking volume bridges these two fields and also positions animation-film sound and music in the context of the screen and music industries. Animation experts like Paul Wells and Daniel Goldmark and film-music authorities including Philip Hayward, Ian Inglis and Janet Halfyard provide international perspectives on the history and aesthetics of music and sound in animation film.

Drawn to Sound focuses on feature-length, widely distributed films released in the period since World War II, from producers in the USA, UK, Japan and France – from Animal Farm (1954) to Happy Feet (2006), Yellow Submarine (1968) to Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005), Spirited Away (2001) and Les Triplettes de Belleville (2003). It spotlights important studios, including Disney, DreamWorks, Aardman Animation and Studio Ghibli, and composers, both those who collaborate personally with director and those whose music is used to provide period or mood atmospheres.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781845533526
Publisher: Equinox Publishing
Publication date: 06/22/2010
Series: Genre, Music and Sound
Pages: 269
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.60(d)

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements vii

About the Authors ix

Introduction: Audio Motion: Animating (Film) Sound Rebecca Coyle 1

Part I Scoring Animation Film

1 "Everybody Scream!": Tim Burton's Animated Gothic-Horror Musical Comedies Janet K. Halfyard 25

2 Halas & Batchelor's Sound Decisions: Musical Approaches in the British Context Paul Wells 40

3 An Animated Partnership: Joe Hisaishi's Musical Contributions to Hayao Miyazaki's Films Kyoko Koizumi 60

Part II Musical Intertextuality

4 Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed... Something Blue: The Beatles' Yellow Submarine Ian Inglis 77

5 Polar Grooves: Dance, Music and Musicality in Happy Feet Philip Hayward 90

6 Minstrelsy and Musical Framing in Who Framed Roger Rabbit Neil Lerner 104

7 An Aesthetic of Ambiguity: Musical Representation of Indigenous Peoples in Disney's Brother Bear Janice Esther Tulk 120

Part III Music and Sonicity

8 Sonic Nostalgia and Les Triplettes de Belleville Daniel Goldmark 141

9 Resilient Appliances: Sound, Image and Narrative in The Brave Little Toaster Jon Fitzgerald Philip Hayward 160

10 Lupin III and the Gekiban Approach: Western-styled Music in a Japanese Format Kentaro Imada 174

Part IV Music and Industrial Contexts

11 DreamWorking Wallace & Gromit: Musical Thematics in The Curse of the Were-Rabbit Rebecca Coyle Peter Morris 191

12 Cowboy Bebop: Corporate Strategies for Animation Music Products in Japan Aki Yamasaki 209

13 Disney Does Broadway: Musical Storytelling in The Little Mermaid and The Lion King Rebecca Coyle Jon Fitzgerald 223

Index 249

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