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  • 1. Shankar, Vikram Symphonies of Horror: Musical Experimentation in Howard Shore's Work with David Cronenberg

    BA, Oberlin College, 2017, Music

    With a career spanning almost forty years, Canadian composer Howard Shore has become one of the most respected and sought after film composers working in the industry today. Much of his work, in particular his scores for the Lord of the Rings films, have received much academic attention; his longstanding working relationship with Canadian horror filmmaker David Cronenberg, however, has not yet benefited from such academic inquiry. Using the films The Brood, Videodrome, The Fly, and Naked Lunch as case studies, this thesis examines the way that Shore uses the arena of Cronenberg's films as a laboratory for personal musical experimentation. Examples include Shore's use of electronic synthesizer sounds alongside a string orchestra for Videodrome, implementations of against-the-grain writing for The Fly, and the incorporation of free-jazz aesthetics in Naked Lunch. Using as sources Howard Shore's words and what academic inquiry exists in this field, but more often utilizing my own analysis and observations of the music and films, I argue that Shore's scores incorporate such musical experimentation to work in tandem with Cronenberg's own experimental art. As such, Shore's scores for Cronenberg's films are a prime illustration of the practical value of experimental composition, showing that there is room for experimental composition in music outside of the realm of academia and indeed that such music can have commercial potential.

    Committee: Stephen Hartke (Advisor); Charles Edward McGuire (Committee Chair); Rebecca Fülöp (Committee Member); Jesse Jones (Committee Member) Subjects: Film Studies; Music
  • 2. Young, Matthew Projecting Tolkien's Musical Worlds: A Study of Musical Affect in Howard Shore's Soundtrack to Lord of the Rings

    Master of Music (MM), Bowling Green State University, 2007, Music Theory

    In their book Ten Little Title Tunes: Towards a Musicology of the Mass Media, Philip Tagg and Bob Clarida build on Tagg's previous efforts to define the musical affect of popular music. By breaking down a musical example into minimal units of musical meaning (called musemes), and comparing those units to other musical examples possessing sociomusical connotations, Tagg demonstrated a transfer of musical affect from the music possessing sociomusical connotations to the object of analysis. While Tagg's studies have focused mostly on television music, this document expands his techniques in an attempt to analyze the musical affect of Howard Shore's score to Peter Jackson's film adaptation of The Lord of the Rings Trilogy. This thesis studies the ability of Shore's film score not only to accompany the events occurring on-screen, but also to provide the audience with cultural and emotional information pertinent to character and story development. After a brief discussion of J.R.R. Tolkien's description of the cultures, poetry, and music traits of the inhabitants found in Middle-earth, this document dissects the thematic material of Shore's film score. The first part of the analysis focuses on Shore's incorporation of the music and culture of Tolkien's text into his film score through instrumentation and style. The second part of the analysis incorporates Tagg's musematic analysis to argue the musical affect of Shore's major themes that is projected on the audience. Additionally, leitmotiv analysis is used to trace the major themes throughout the trilogy, and to investigate how Shore's alterations of the themes modify their musical affect. By comparing Shore's film score to Tolkien's text, considering the visual representation the score accompanies, as well as by comparing Shore's themes to other music possessing connotations, an argument is made that Shore's score does more than accompany Jackson's screen. Since Shore's score reflects music and culture as described by To (open full item for complete abstract)

    Committee: Per Broman (Advisor) Subjects: Music