Eye for Music
Popular Music and the Audiovisual Surreal (livre en anglais)
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Description de l'ouvrage :
The music we hear is always inhabited by voices of previous performances. Because listening is now so often accompanied by moving images, this process is more complex than ever. Music videos, television and film music, interactive video games, and social media are now part of the contemporary listening experience.
In An Eye for Music, author John Richardson navigates key areas of current thought - from music theory to film theory to cultural theory - to explore what it means that the experience of music is now cinematic, spatial, and visual as much as it is auditory. Richardson maps out the terrain of recent audiovisual production over a wide array of styles and practices, and sketches out a set of common structures that inform how we experience sound and vision. Whether examining Philip Glass or The Gorillaz, Richard Linklater's Waking Life or Michel Gondry's Be Kind Rewind, Richardson's arguments are both fascinating and provocative.
À propos de l'auteur :
John Richardson is Professor of Musicology at the University of Turku in Finland and author of Singing Archaeology: Philip Glass's Akhnaten (1999).
Voir le site internet de l'éditeur Oxford University Press
> Du même auteur :
The Oxford Handbook of New Audiovisual Aesthetics (2015)
Dir. John Richardson, Claudia Gorbman et Carol Vernallis
Sujet : Théorie
> Sur un thème proche :
The Synergy of Music and Image in Audiovisual Culture (2023)
Half-Heard Sounds and Peripheral Visions
Haunted Soundtracks (2025)
Audiovisual Cultures of Memory, Landscape, and Sound
Dir. Kevin J. Donnelly et Aimee Mollaghan
Musical Sincerity and Transcendence in Film (2023)
Reflexive Fictions
Sound Design is the New Score (2019)
Theory, Aesthetics, and Erotics of the Integrated Soundtrack