ABSTRACT

Music in the Western: Notes from the Frontier presents essays from both film studies scholars and musicologists on core issues in western film scores: their history, their generic conventions, their operation as part of a narrative system, their functioning within individual filmic texts and their ideological import, especially in terms of the western’s construction of gender, sexuality, race and ethnicity. The Hollywood western is marked as uniquely American by its geographic setting, prototypical male protagonist and core American values. Music in the Western examines these conventions and the scores that have shaped them. But the western also had a resounding international impact, from Europe to Asia, and this volume distinguishes itself by its careful consideration of music in non-Hollywood westerns, such as Ravenous and The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly and in the “easterns” which influenced them, such as Yojimbo.  Other films discussed include Wagon Master, High Noon, Calamity Jane, The Big Country, The Unforgiven, Dead Man, Wild Bill, There Will Be Blood and No Country for Old Men.

Contributors

Ross Care
Corey K. Creekmur
Yuna de Lannoy
K. J. Donnelly
Caryl Flinn
Claudia Gorbman
Kathryn Kalinak
Charles Leinberger
Matthew McDonald
Peter Stanfield
Mariana Whitmer
Ben Winters

The Routledge Music and Screen Media Series offers edited collections of original essays on music in particular genres of cinema, television, video games and new media.  These edited essay collections are written for an interdisciplinary audience of students and scholars of music and film and media studies.

 


 

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

part I|96 pages

Music in the Classical Hollywood Studio Film

chapter 1|16 pages

The Cowboy Chorus

Narrative and Cultural Functions of the Western Title Song

chapter 2|14 pages

“A Cowboy has to Sing”

John Ford, Walt Disney, and Sons of the Pioneers

chapter 3|26 pages

Reinventing the Western Film Score

Jerome Moross and The Big Country

chapter 4|17 pages

Silencing the Truth

Music and Identity in The Unforgiven

chapter 5|21 pages

A Tale of Two Cowgirls

Songs, Western Novelty Acts, and 1950s Hollywood

part II|66 pages

Westerns Outside Hollywood

chapter 6|14 pages

Innovation and Imitation

An Analysis of the Soundscape of Akira Kurosawa's Chambara Westerns

chapter 7|17 pages

The Dollars Trilogy

“There are two kinds of western heroes, my friend!”

chapter 8|17 pages

Europe Cannibalizes the Western

Ravenous

chapter 9|16 pages

“How … were We Going to make a Picture that's Better than this?”

Crossing Borders from East to West in Rashomon and The Outrage

part III|47 pages

The Contemporary Western

chapter 10|20 pages

From the Barroom Floor

American Song, Saloon Culture, Stack O'Lee, and Wild Bill, or “Did you touch my hat?”

chapter 11|11 pages

Musical Worlds of the Millennial Western

Dead Man and The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada

chapter 12|14 pages

Mountains, Music, and Murder

Scoring the American West in There Will Be Blood and No Country For Old Men