ABSTRACT

Recomposing the Past is a book concerned with the complex but important ways in which we engage with the past in modern times. Contributors examine how media on stage and screen uses music, and in particular early music, to evoke and recompose a distant past. Culture, popular and otherwise, is awash with a stylise - sometimes contradictory - musical history. And yet for all its complexities, these representations of the past through music are integral to how our contemporary and collective imaginations understand history. More importantly, they offer a valuable insight into how we understand our musical present. Such representative strategies, the book argues, cross generic boundaries, and as such it brings together a range of multimedia discussion on the subjects of film (Lord of the Rings, Dangerous Liasions), television (Game of Thrones, The Borgias), videogame (Dragon Warrior, Gauntlet), and opera (Written on Skin, Taverner, English ‘dramatick opera’). This collection constitutes a significant, and interdisciplinary, contribution to a growing literature which is unpacking our ongoing creative dialogue with the past. Divided into three complementary sections, grouped not by genre or media but by theme, it considers: ‘Authenticity, Appropriateness, and Recomposing the Past’, ‘Music, Space, and Place: Geography as History’, and ‘Presentness and the Past: Dialogues between Old and New’. Like the musical collage that is our shared multimedia historical soundscape, it is hoped that this collection is, in its eclecticism, more than the sum of its parts.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Understanding the present through the past and the past through the present

part 1|72 pages

Authenticity, appropriateness, and recomposing the past

chapter 1|17 pages

Representing Renaissance Rome

Beyond anachronism in Showtime’s The Borgias (2011)

chapter 2|19 pages

Baroque à la Hitchcock

The music of Dangerous Liaisons (1988)

chapter 3|13 pages

‘Frame not my lute’

The musical Tudor Court on the big screen

chapter 4|23 pages

It ain’t over ‘til King Arthur sings

English dramatick opera on the modern stage

part 2|66 pages

Music, space, and placeGeography as history

chapter 6|17 pages

Celtic music and Hollywood cinema

Representation, stereotype, and affect

chapter 8|14 pages

Little harmonic labyrinths

Baroque musical style on the Nintendo Entertainment System

part 3|98 pages

Presentness and the pastDialogues between old and new

chapter 10|14 pages

Angels in the archive

Animating the past in Written on Skin

chapter 11|25 pages

Werner Herzog and the filmic dark arts

Myth, truth, music, and the life of Carlo Gesualdo (1566–1613)

chapter 13|22 pages

Music in fantasy pasts

Neomedievalism and Game of Thrones