Film soundtrack
Music Sound
Film soundtrack
Film score | Filmi
A film soundtrack is the
music
that is from or inspired by a
feature film. Soundtracks themselves are not limited to film. One may
find soundtracks to television shows, ranging from ER to the anime
Cowboy Bebop, and video games such as the Final Fantasy series.
Soundtracks can be divided by purpose and placement. As a general rule,
soundtracks can be divided into the score and the songs from (or inspired by)
the movie/TV show/video game.
Origin
It is likely the film "soundtrack" came into existence about the same time as
the films themselves. Early films were
silent, but were released with cue sheets or scores so that individual theater
houses could play music, recorded or live, at appropriate places in the film.
The first reels of 1961's West Side Story and 2001's Moulin Rouge! follow the
practice of the era of silent film by beginning with an orchestra playing the
opening theme. With the advent of talkies in
1927, music was optically integrated into the actual film itself, and the wide
world of film soundtracks was born.
Score (background music)
- Main article
film
score
The score to a film is also known as its background music. This is arguably
the most common type of music heard on a film soundtrack, is music composed and
placed to enhance the desired emotion of a scene, be it positive or negative.
The actors on screen are talking and moving normally, that is, they are neither
singing nor dancing nor interacting with the music in any way (except in cases
of a spoof). A person watching the movie may not be aware that anything is
playing, but might comment on the poorness or flatness of a scene should the
music be removed. The background music is usually orchestrated without
meaningful vocals (with the exception of some chanting), and somewhat formless, based heavily on musical peaks and troughs that highlight
the scene but which otherwise may be nonsensical or even boring when played
alone.
Most background music follows a general pattern of
instrumentation and
technique to achieve whatever ends the composer desires. Common examples of such
devices used in background music include trilling
violins to indicate suspense,
legato
flutes to
convey peaceful or pastoral setting,
trumpet
fanfares for
military or martial scenes, and drumming
for tribal
events.
Movies with notable soundtracks consisting mainly of background music include
the Lord of the Rings movie trilogy (Howard Shore, composer), Star Wars (John
Williams, composer), The Mission (Ennio Morricone, composer) and The Piano
(Michael Nyman, composer).
Themes
Closely related to a movie’s background music is the theme(s) of the movie. A
theme is a particular melodic or rhythmic motif that appears in the music whenever a certain event, usually the
presence or entrance of a major character, occurs (see
leitmotif).
Themes differ from background music in that they are usually tuneful and will
stand alone if removed from the context of the movie. Also unlike background
music, the song may often have purposeful lyrics.
The theme is usually repeated throughout the course of the film. Sometimes,
it is introduced early and manipulated with regards to tempo, key, and
instrumentation to fit the particular mood. For example, an upbeat theme may be
played in a minor mode if the character it is associated with suffers or dies. It may be
slowed down for a romantic moment or sped up for stressful emotions. It may be
placed in
counterpoint with another theme to show a relationship. A theme may also be
hinted at as a character develops and be finally played in full when the
character reaches a peak. For example, in the Attack of the Clones, when Anakin
Skywalker makes the choice to exact revenge on the people who killed his mother,
the Imperial March from Star Wars is played in full for the first time that movie.
A single movie may have one or many strong themes. Often, a movie will have a
primary theme played during the opening and/or closing credits that is not heard
in totality anywhere else in the film. In certain cases, this song may be sung
(usually by a popular singer unrelated to the rest of the film) during the
credits, but instrumented when inserted into the film. This is called the title
song and is discussed later. A film may have an orchestrated theme as well as a
title song, composed by different people with different results. Often, one will
succeed commercially while the other will fail.
The theme of a film may eventually come to symbolize a character or the film
itself, to the point where the original purpose of the theme may be lost. The
opening strains of
Also sprach Zarathustra and Blue Danube Waltz by Richard Strauss are
inextricably linked to 2001: A Space Odyssey, though few can remember when in
the film the themes were first played. Themes are usually titled for the movie
they occur in, such as The Theme from Schindler's List or Theme from the
Magnificent Seven, and may be distinguished as to why they occur,
such as the Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet.
Title song
A title song is a theme, usually sung to lyrics, and associated with a
particular movie that is heard in toto during the credits and rarely
anywhere else in the film, except in the case of
musicals. Usually the title song is composed for the movie itself, but
sometimes existing pieces are used, especially when a current movie is set in a
recent era that possessed stereotypical music, such as
disco. The singer
of the title theme is usually unrelated to the movie itself, with
Barbra Streisand being a notable exception.
Title songs are, by and large, vague in their references to the film’s
particulars, focusing instead on general themes of love, loss, and betrayal.
These songs often go on to be commercial successes even if the movie was
forgettable, though the fate of both movie and title song are intertwined. One
wonders if "My Heart Will Go On" would have become such a hit had not Titanic
succeeded as well as it did. Ditto for "I Will Always Love You" and its
corresponding movie The Bodyguard.
Occasionally, a film will have both a popular orchestrated theme and a sung
theme. The James Bond films all feature the James Bond theme as well as a
movie-specific title song, such as Carly Simon's The Spy who Loved Me (Nobody Does it Better).
Musicals
Many films made in the
1940s through 1960s especially
were little more than filmed
musicals, screen-based adaptations of popular staged plays. In the musical,
important feelings, events, and conversations take place using song and dance
rather than using dialogue and action. The resulting play is about half speech
and half music.
There is also background music in musicals, but it is different than that of
non-musicals. Since most of the action in a musical is accompanied by singing
and dancing, the only parts scored with background music in the musical are
dialogue and transition scenes. This music is usually composed entirely of the
themes played earlier, only instead of being sung, they are orchestrated. This
is called incidental music. Incidental music is non-interactive: the characters
do not acknowledge it or use it.
Musicals usually have only one title song. However, that title song may
mention elements of the plot and characters that the general public may not
understand. As a result, a musical's most commercially successful song may not
be the title 'song. Jesus Christ Superstar had a title song of the same name,
but it was the piece I Don't Know How to Love Him that gained the most air play.
In the case of Chess, the Act II song "One Night in Bangkok" was transformed
into a 1980s hit by Murray Head, leaving the musical itself to languish in relative obscurity. The
title song may or may not be sung by the actor/actress who originated the role.
Soviet cinematography traditionally relied heavily on songs with lyrics,
even in non-musical films.
Modern films are rarely musicals, though recent films such as Chicago and
Moulin Rouge seem to be reviving the trend. The closest Hollywood comes to
producing musicals nowadays are animated films, though Bollywood still embraces the film musical as a viable form.
Animated musicals
Most animated films produced by Disney are musicals. Indeed, almost every
feature-length animated feature which is not anime is a musical, although
Pixar's animated features are not musicals. Animated films share all basic
characteristics with their live-action counterparts, except that the incidental
music is more likely to be novel, i.e. in the tradition of non-musical film
scores.
Title songs from animated musicals do sometimes go on to become commercially
successful, a fact capitalized on by such singers as
Elton John (The Lion King) and Céline Dion (Beauty and the Beast). The glory
days of the Disney song might be considered to have come during the tenure of
Alan Menken and Howard Ashman.
Songs from the movie
Existing in a similar place, but different class, as the score are the
so-called songs from the movie, which will be abbreviated SftM for now. SftM are
discrete songs, almost always not composed specifically for the movie, heard
during the course of the movie itself. A SftM may either be background music or
semi-interactive.
An SftM used as background music functions much in the same way as an
orchestrated piece would. It is added external to the movie and used to heighten
the mood. The main difference is its existing as a full, independent song
without being a theme (and thus played only once during the film), though a
piece such as Shaft
would traverse that boundary.
A semi-interactive SftM is a song playing in the context of the movie, such
as the background music in a club or a tune heard on the radio of a character’s
car. When a semi-interactive SftM is playing, it functions as background music,
so it would be rare to see a gang fight scene with a giddy SftM unless the
director were going for irony.
The average movie soundtrack will contain eight or so SftM by popular artists
tangentially or unrelated to the film itself. Forrest Gump's soundtrack is one
of the best selling of all times and reads almost like a laundry list of popular
tunes from the Baby Boomer generation.
Songs inspired by the movie
A somewhat recent invention, songs inspired by the movie are almost always
not actually played in the movie itself. Instead, as the title suggests, they
are derivative of the musical, cultural, social, etc. themes of the film. This
seems to be done primarily to capitalize on the success of a particular film.
After the soundtrack to The Lion King was released to great acclaim,
Disney released the follow-up album Rhythm of the Pridelands.
Notable soundtracks
8 Mile (This movie has two soundtracks, the first containing award
winning hit "Lose Yourself")
2001: A Space Odyssey (memorable theme music Also Sprach Zarathustra became
a radio hit, rare for a classical instrumental piece)
American Graffiti (massive-selling double album of rock oldies)
Apocalypse Now (another hit, memorable use of the Ride of the Valkyries by
Richard Wagner)
Black Hawk Down (by Hans Zimmer. One of his best soundtracks composed, given
the short time frame he had to finish the task for the movie)
The Bodyguard (by Whitney Houston and others, bestselling of all time)
Deep Red (first album by Goblin, 1975 soundtrack to popular Dario Argento
thriller)
Selmasongs (from Dancer in the Dark by Björk)
Fast Times at Ridgemont High (successful soundtrack using contemporary hits)
Flashdance (launched several hit songs, surprise hit)
Garden State (won a Grammy for Best Soundtrack in 2005 for first time
director Zach Braff)
Gladiator (yet another of Hans Zimmer's best-composed soundtracks)
A Hard Day's Night (early rock and roll soundtrack by The Beatles)
The Harder They Come (very successful soundtrack and movie, launched career
of Jimmy Cliff, early mainstream reggae music)
Jungle Book (first soundtrack in the modern sense, from the 1942 film scored
by Miklós Rózsa)
Miami Vice (TV soundtrack that stayed at the top of the album charts for 11
weeks in 1985)
Mo' Better Blues (established Gang Starr's reputation and helped launch jazz
rap)
O Brother Where Art Thou? (surprise bluegrass hit, Grammy winner)
Peter Gunn (first jazz soundtrack, theme song is still recognizable by many
people today)
Reservoir Dogs (soundtrack deliberately chose the "worst" songs of the
1970s, became a cult favorite)
Saturday Night Fever (massive hit mostly by the Bee Gees, brought disco to
the mainstream)
Shaft (hit by Isaac Hayes, his biggest record and Academy Award winner)
Space Jam (popular tracks by Seal, and R. Kelly)
Star Wars (hugely popular movie, and music by John Williams that became the
bestselling score-only soundtrack of all time)
The Stoned Age (early teen film focused on a cult band, Blue Öyster Cult)
Superfly (A number one hit for Curtis Mayfield, pioneering socially
conscious lyrics in funk and soul)
That's the Way of the World (film unsuccessful, soundtrack a huge hit for
Earth, Wind & Fire)
Till the Clouds Roll by (soundtrack and film inspired by life of Jerome
Kern, early use of the release of a soundtrack to promote a film)
Urban Cowboy (soundtrack from the movie that brought country music and the
honky tonk lifestyle to many suburban cultures, and spawned many hits,
credited to have been launching the boom in country music appeal in 1980)
The Lord of the Rings film trilogy (Original scores by Howard Shore who
iconically evoked the sounds of Tolkien's Middle-Earth; roughly 80 different
leitmotifs were composed for all three films)
Bestselling soundtracks
The Bodyguard (1992); 17 times platinum
Saturday Night Fever (1977); 15 times platinum
Purple Rain (1984); 13 times platinum
Forrest Gump (1994); 12 times platinum
Dirty Dancing (1987); 11 times platinum
The Lion King (1994); 10 times platinum
(Tie) Top Gun (1986); Footloose (1984); 9 times platinum
Grease (1978); 8 times platinum
Waiting to Exhale (1995); 7 times platinum
List of songs popularized by a movie
Some of these songs had been released before the movie, but had found little
success only to become popular once featured in the movie. Other songs were
released alongside the film or were briefly re-popularized some years after
their initial peak. (This list does not include songs associated with a
cinematic opera or musical.)
Most of these
theme songs
occur at least once during a
climax during the movie, and are often played during the opening and/or
closing credits; the close association between the highlights of a movie and a
particular song, especially when the two are marketed together (as in a
music
video), means that songs can find new audiences. For example,
Quentin Tarantino's use of "La La Means I Love You" and 1970s Philly soul group
The Delfonics led to a renaissance in hipness for the band some fifteen years
after their mainstream success ended.
Blue Öyster Cult's "Don't Fear the Reaper" from The Stoned Age
Elton John's "Circle of Life" from The Lion King
Céline Dion's "My Heart Will Go On" from Titanic
Stealers Wheel's "Stuck In The Middle" from Reservoir Dogs
Lynyrd Skynyrd's "Tuesday's Gone" from Dazed and Confused
The Proclaimers' "I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)" from Benny and Joon
Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" from Wayne's World
Rolling Stones' "Time Is on My Side" from Fallen
Simple Minds' "Don't You (Forget About Me)" from The Breakfast Club
Whitney Houston's "I Will Always Love You" from The Bodyguard
R. Kelly's "I Believe I Can Fly" from Space Jam
"March of the Volunteers", theme song to the movie Sons and Daughters in a
Time of Storm, which became the national anthem of the People's Republic of
China
Louis Armstrong's "What a Wonderful World" from Good Morning, Vietnam
See Also
External links
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Music Sound, v. 2.0, by MultiMedia
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