ABSTRACT
Franz Waxman (1906–1967) was a jazz musician, orchestrator, film composer, concert organizer, conductor, and a composer of concert and opera works. It was only after his emigration to the USA in the early 1930s that Waxman built himself a career in the concert hall – before this point he was exclusively working for the film and entertainment industries. Ingeborg Zechner explores Waxman’s musical career as being situated "between film music and the concert hall," highlighting the various intersections between these two areas by examining his biography – including his migration – his activities as musical director of the Los Angeles Music Festival, his international career as a conductor, and the film music that Waxman adapted for different contemporary media. Zechner shows that Hollywood composers, such as Waxman, perceived film music’s intermediality in the 1940s to 1960s as being crucial for the aesthetic identity of the film musical work, and, therefore, provides insights into not only Waxman’s career but also the historical and cultural context of American and international musical life.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|100 pages
Biographical and Historical Contexts
chapter 3|22 pages
The Los Angeles Music Festival (1947–1966) in contemporary institutional, aesthetic, and political context
chapter 4|34 pages
Franz Waxman, the Los Angeles Music Festival, and Cold War cultural politics
part II|82 pages
Discourse and Reception
chapter 5|4 pages
The reception of Franz Waxman between film music and the concert hall
chapter 9|14 pages
The contemporary reception of mediality between film music and the concert hall
part III|103 pages
Media Transfers
