Sounding Cinema

Written by: Nathan Platte
  • Summary

  • Nathan Platte joins University of Iowa students to explore how film music and sound transport us, building worlds beyond what we see on screen. Sounding Cinema hosts conversations among students and authors to show how soundscapes shape our relationships to characters, story, and film itself.
    Nathan Platte
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Episodes
  • Once More, With Song: The Musical Television Episode
    Jul 23 2024

    Sounding Cinema turns to the musical television episode! Erika Chagdes, Abbie McLaren, Caleb Payne, and Nathan Platte spotlight the unique and often comedic opportunities that arise when a TV series turns into a musical…for just one episode. By comparing “Once More, With Feeling,” the infamous musical episode from Buffy, the Vampire Slayer, with “Regional Holiday Music,” Community’s glee-ful fiasco, we discover some ways in which TV musicals can teach us a lot about musicals and the episodic format of television itself.


    More about the team:

    Erika Chagdes graduated from the University of Iowa in 2024 with a BA in Cinema. She is excited to pursue a career in filmmaking.

    Abbie McLaren is a University of Iowa student with a double major in Cinema and Journalism and Mass Communication (production and design track). After graduating in 2025, she plans to pursue film professionally through work or graduate studies.

    Caleb Payne graduated from the University of Iowa in 2024 with a BA in Cinema. He plans to attend a graduate-level studio art program in the future.

    Samuel Ross, who provided original music, is a University of Iowa student drawn to both film and music. A Cinema major, Sam also composes, writes film music, and enjoys playing piano and bass.


    Resources:

    Kelly Kessler, Broadway in the Box: Television’s Lasting Love Affair with the Musical (New York: Oxford University Press, 2020).

    Kathryn VanArendonk, “Theorizing the Television Episode,” Narrative 27, no. 1 (2019), 65–82. Project MUSE, https://doi.org/10.1353/nar.2019.0004.

    Paul Attinello, Janet K. Halfyard, and Vanessa Knights (eds.), Music, Sound, and Silence in Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Oxon: Taylor and Francis, 2010).

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    25 mins
  • The Young Girls of Rochefort (1967) and 'The Young Girls' Turn 25 (1993): Different Spins on the Film Musical
    Jul 9 2024

    Sounding Cinema returns to the immersive musicals of Jacques Demy, exploring the serious whimsy and peculiar pairs of The Young Girls of Rochefort (1967). Join Abbie McLaren, Caleb Payne, and Nathan Platte as we discuss the ways in which Demy’s film, Michel Legrand's music, and Agnès Varda’s documentary about the film play with and against the formula of the Hollywood studio musical.

    Special thanks to: Samuel Ross, who wrote and recorded original and adapted music for the episode. Erika Chagdes, who helped with production preparation. Abbie McLaren, who designed our episode artwork.

    More about the team:

    Erika Chagdes graduated from the University of Iowa in 2024 with a BA in Cinema. She is excited to pursue a career in filmmaking.

    Abbie McLaren is a University of Iowa student with a double major in Cinema and Journalism and Mass Communication (production and design track). After graduating in 2025, she plans to pursue film professionally through work or graduate studies.

    Caleb Payne graduated from the University of Iowa in 2024 with a BA in Cinema. He plans to attend a graduate-level studio art program in the future.

    Sam Ross is a University of Iowa student drawn to both film and music. A Cinema major, Sam also composes, writes film music, and enjoys playing piano and bass.

    Resources:

    Rick Altman, “From Homosocial to Heterosexual: The Musical’s Two Projects,” in The Sound of Musicals, edited by Steven Cohan (London: British Film Institute, 2010), 19–29.

    Andrea Bravo, “‘Have you found her yet?’: The Dream World of Jacques Demy’s ‘The Young Girls of Rochefort.’” UF Prism, 7 March 2023, https://ufprism.com/2023/03/07/have-you-found-her-yet-the-dream-world-of-jacques-demys-the-young-girls-of-rochefort.

    Jacques Demy, director, The Young Girls of Rochefort (1967), Criterion Blu-Ray/DVD, https://www.criterion.com/films/28615-the-young-girls-of-rochefort. (Includes Agnès Varda’s 1993 documentary, The Young Girls Turn 25.)

    Michel Legrand, Les Demoiselles de Rochefort, Ecoutez le Cinèma, 5 CDs, 2017, https://www.discogs.com/release/11630978-Michel-Legrand-Jacques-Demy-Les-Demoiselles-De-Rochefort.


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    53 mins
  • Jack Curtis Dubowsky on the Legacy of Easy Listening in Film Music
    Jun 16 2022

    Cecilia Kryzda and Nathan Platte talk with Jack Curtis Dubowsky about his recent book, Easy Listening and Film Scoring, 1948-1978 (Routledge, 2021). A composer, performer, and scholar, Jack illuminates the vast and underappreciated opportunities easy listening provided film composers and how certain styles and habits shaped later music and film practices. Jack also explains the process of writing the book, including his inspiration behind the project and how his vision for the book changed over time.

    Jack's book spotlights an array of fascinating albums and films. His recommendations for listeners are:

    Music:

    1. Michel Legrand, I Love Paris (preferably the original mono record)
    2. Michel Legrand, Archi-chordes
    3. Cecil Holmes, The Black Motion Picture Experience
    4. Charlie Parker, Charlie Parker with Strings
    5. Wendy Carlos, Sonic Seasonings
    6. Stu Phillips & The Hollyridge Strings (all the albums)

    Films and TV

    1. Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961, music by Henry Mancini)
    2. Peter Gunn television series (1958-61, music by Henry Mancini)
    3. Umbrellas of Cherbourg (1964, music by Michel Legrand)
    4. Partir Revenir (1985, music by Michel Legrand)
    5. Mahogany (1975, music arranged by Lee Holdridge)
    6. Battlestar Galactica (1979, music by Stu Phillips)
    7. Watership Down (1978, music by Angela Morley)
    8. The Lawrence Welk Show (1951-1982)
    9. The Liberace Show (1952­-1969)

    The musical excerpts heard in the episode are discussed in Jack’s book. In order of appearance, they are:

    1. Michel Legrand, I Love Paris, “La Vie en rose” (Édith Piaf, Louiguy)
    2. Quincy Jones, Quincy Jones Explores the Music of Henry Mancini, Theme from Charade (Henry Mancini)
    3. Hollyridge Strings, The Best of the Beatles, vol. 2, “Ticket to Ride,” (Lennon-McCartney)
    4. Ramsey Lewis, The Movie Album, Theme from The Pawnbroker (Quincy Jones)
    5. Swingle Singers, Jazz Sebastian Bach, “Fugue in D Minor” and “Wachet auf” (J. S. Bach)
    6. Henry Mancini, Breakfast at Tiffany’s, “Moon River (Original Main Title)” (Mancini)
    7. Henry Mancini, Encore, “Foreign Film Festival” (theme from Legrand’s Umbrellas of Cherbourg)
    8. Charlie Parker, Charlie Parker with Strings, “Laura” (David Raksin)
    9. Michel Legrand, Archi-chordes, “Di-gue ding ding” (Legrand)
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    34 mins

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