Sounds From The Empty City (soundtrack)


Autoria(s): Megarrity, David Robert
Data(s)

23/02/2014

Resumo

These wordless songs were composed as music first, and soundtrack second. There is a difference. A soundtrack will always be connected with whatever it is accompanying. Music doesn’t neccessarily need to reference anything else. The Empty City transformed a picture book into a non-verbal performance combining the live and animated. Without spoken words the show would dance on the dangerous intersection of music, image and action. In both theatre and film (and this production drew on both traditions) soundtrack and music are often added on at the end when everything’s been pre-determined, a passive, responsive mode for such a powerful artform. It’s literally added in ‘post’. In The Empty City, music was present from its inception and grew with the show. It was active in process and product. It frequently led rehearsals and shaped other key decisions in virtual and live performance. Rather than tailor-make music towards pre-determined moments, independent compositions created without specific reference to narrative experimented with the creation of a flock of small musical pieces. I was interested in seeing how they flew and where they roosted, rather than having them born and raised in (narrative) captivity. The sonic palette is largely acoustic, incorporating ukulele, prepared piano and supported by a range of other elements tending towards electronica. Eventually more than seventy pieces of music were made for this show, twice the number used. These pieces were then placed in relation to the emerging scenes, then adapted in duration, texture and progression to develop a relationship with the scene. In this way, music (even when it’s synced) has a conversation with a performance, an exchange that may result in surprise rather than fulfillment of expectation. Leitmotif emerged from loops and layers, as the pieces of music ‘conversed’ with each other, rather than being premeditated and imposed. Nineteen of these tracks are compiled for this release, which finds the compositions (which progressed through many versions) poised at the moment between their fullest iteration as ‘music’ and their editing and full incorporation into a sychronised soundtrack. They are released as the began: as 'music-alone' (Kivy) In picture-book writing, the mutual interplay of text and image is sometimes referred to as interanimation , and this is the kind of symbiosis this project sought in the creation of the soundtrack. Reviewers of the noted the important role of the soundtrack in two separate productions of The Empty City: “The original score…takes centre stage” (Borhani, 2013) “…swept up in its repetition of sounds and images, like a Bach fugue” (Zampatti, 2013)

Formato

image/jpeg

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/68128/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/68128/1/sounds-from-tec-by-jonathon-oxlade.jpg

http://lifeinthelongtail.wordpress.com/2014/02/19/sounds-from-the-empty-city/

Megarrity, David Robert (2014) Sounds From The Empty City (soundtrack). [Inter-arts]

Direitos

Copyright 2014 David Megarrity

Fonte

Drama; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #190400 PERFORMING ARTS AND CREATIVE WRITING #190404 Drama Theatre and Performance Studies #190406 Music Composition #Music #Performance #Composed Theatre #Soundtrack #Theatre
Tipo

Creative Work