Composing For Silent Film 2024
Composing For Silent Film 2024
Composing For Silent Film 2024
Composing for Silent Film offers insight, information, and techniques for con-
temporary composition, arrangement, and live score performance for period
silent film. A specialized music composition guide, this book complements
existing film scoring and contemporary music composition texts. This book
helps today’s composers better understand and correctly interpret period
silent film, and to create and perform live scores that align with films’ original
intentions, so that audiences notice and grasp fine points of the original film.
Composing for Silent Film analyzes period silent film and its conventions –
from Delsarte acting gestures to period fascinations and subtexts. As a practical
composition text, it weighs varying approaches, including improvisation,
through-scoring, “mickey-mousing,” handling dialogue, and dividing roles
amongst players. It steers composers towards informed understanding of silent
film, and encourages them to deploy contemporary styles and techniques in
exciting ways.
For clarity and concision, examples are limited to nine canonical silents:
Metropolis, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Mark of Zorro, Sunrise: A Song of
Two Humans, The Black Pirate, Nosferatu, The Phantom Carriage, Daisy
Doodad’s Dial, and The Golem.
Acknowledgments ix
Preface xi
Glossary 117
Acknowledgments
Above all, I want to thank musicians past and present of the Jack Curtis
Dubowsky Ensemble from whom I have learned so much and with whom I
have experimented and road-tested different approaches, methods, and ideas.
They have suffered through starvation wages, delayed checks, conducting
fails, missing courtesy accidentals, cramped rehearsal spaces, long drives,
candid photography, and social media posts. These musicians include, at one
time or another:
Michael G. Bauer
Marc T. Bolin
Joshua Britt
Ellen Burr
Alicia Byer
Paul Curtis
Nicholas Deyoe
R. Scott Dibble
Trevor Dolce
Stevie Garcia
Hall N. Goff
Jonathan Grasse
John Graves
Audrey Harrer
Zoe Hartenbaum
Erika Johnson
Rebecca Lynn
Angelo Metz
Fred Morgan
Gabriel SLAM Nobles
Laura Osborn
Kevin Schlossman
Jeff L. Schwartz
Charles Sharp
x Acknowledgments
Sean Sonderegger
Sean Stackpoole
Henry Webster
Scott Worthington
Lisa Yoshida
It is from your musicians that you will learn the most. It is not always in the
form of an answer to a question, nor is it always the knowledge you sought.
I would like to thank people I’ve worked with: bookers, theater manag-
ers, press people, publicists, writers, reviewers, photographers, volunteers,
and projectionists. These include Bret Berg, Logan Crow, Jan van Dijs, Craig
Hammill, Kerstin Kansteiner, and Kurt Nishimura, who have all helped me
tremendously.
I’d like to thank academic colleagues for their help, especially J. Anthony
Allen, Annette Davison, Colin Roust, Charles Sharp, and my own Music for
Media Ensemble students. My editor Heidi Bishop deserves great thanks for
her patience, interest in my fanciful book proposals, and putting up with me
in general.
I’d like to thank all the people who came to see our shows. I learned what
resonates with an audience, what works, and what doesn’t. They taught me
how timing is essential, a theme that runs through this book.
Preface
Objectives
This book is an analysis of period silent film and its conventions – from
Delsarte acting gestures to period fascinations and subtexts – and a practi-
cal composition text, weighing varying approaches and concerns, including
improvisation, through-scoring, mickey-mousing, handling dialogue, nota-
tion, and dividing roles amongst players.
Interest in new, original, live music for silent film has surged. Composers
and ensembles – student and professional – enjoy the challenges and creative
opportunities, but navigate these films awkwardly when they:
Examples used
For clarity and concision, examples are limited to nine canonical silent films
including: Metropolis, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Mark of Zorro, Sunrise:
A Song of Two Humans, The Black Pirate, Nosferatu, The Phantom Carriage,
Daisy Doodad’s Dial, and The Golem.
1 Silent film conventions
Audiences love silent film – ballets of light and shadow that transcend time.
Contemporary audiences readily understand them – or seem to.
Contemporary audiences often miss subtle details of plot, character, and
context, especially if these are not adequately reinforced in the accompanying
score. (At the same time, aspects that may have passed unnoticed to period
audiences may be glaringly obvious to contemporary audiences: misogyny,
racism, xenophobia, unsustainability.)
Silent films employ conventions, some of which have been preserved in
contemporary film, and some which have not. These conventions give mean-
ing to silent film. Composers need to be aware of silent film conventions and
consider them in their scoring. Composers should understand how a film
played to an audience in its day, and how directors telegraphed meaning. Our
goal is to fully understand the film, and to use an original score to help our
audience grasp as much as possible.
DOI: 10.4324/9781003254447-1
2 Silent film conventions
Storytelling is how a story is told. The Phantom Carriage tells a story
through a series of flashbacks into the supernatural; it uses ghosts and horror,
and mines anxieties of domestic abuse. It is this setting and treatment that is so
engaging. Because ghosts and domestic abuse directly support the story, they
are not gratuitous, and thus powerful.
Themes are recurring arguments and underlying messages explored or con-
veyed through the work. The Phantom Carriage has several prominent themes:
the evils of alcoholism; the goodness of sacrifice, purity, and standing by your
man; our earthly mortality. While expressed through ghosts and the supernatu-
ral, the central theme is that alcohol is bad; the film supports Sweden’s prohibi-
tion movement at the time, which seems to be its ulterior motive.
Plot organizes story into acts, scenes, twists, and order of exposition. Plot
is where elements of the story become arranged and rearranged: things that
happened earlier may be presented later as flashbacks. Subplots and second-
ary storylines are placed in context. Plot can be nonlinear. Plot can have an
outline. Plot can present backstory or omit unnecessary details, like where
characters ate lunch.
Narrative, often used interchangeably with plot, implies narration and
narrator; a story may be told from a particular point of view, and this view-
point is crucial to narrative. Plot may diverge from narrative in cases where
– considering The Phantom Carriage – intricate sequencing of flashbacks (or
other devices) may be important to the plot, but less so to Sister Edit’s per-
sonal narrative of self-sacrifice.
These distinctions matter; they inform our compositional choices in scor-
ing a film. Should we hit some detail of the unfolding plot? Something that
speaks to an archetypal story? Something that bolsters an underlying theme?
A plot device? A character? A story element? Can we write music that sup-
ports several of these? In good situations, plot, themes, story, and narrative
work together, enabling music to reinforce all of them. Still, there are always
a number of musical paths and opportunities before you. There’s more on this
later in Chapter 2, Spotting: choosing what moments to play, and in Chapter
3, Plan your themes.
Advanced readers may note that these terms (story, storytelling, themes,
plot, narrative) and their divisions rely heavily on literary theory and
may question why they should be relevant to cinema. We may note
that these concepts arise from western European literature, the eleva-
tion of Greek mythology, Plato, Aristotle, and “beginning-middle-end”
structures that connect to “three act structure” – but this is not the be-
all-end-all of storytelling. What other literary and visual traditions can
be used to structure cinematic storytelling? What dramatic films exem-
plify non-western story structures?
Mechanical conventions
Many characteristics of silent film derive from the capabilities of the equip-
ment and techniques available at the time. How shots were composed or
staged – including blocking, lighting, and camera movements – were aesthetic
choices made within physical and mechanical limitations. A film’s structure
was formalized by editing and projection limitations.
Reels
Feature films were, by necessity, broken into reels. Projection alternated
between two projectors; going back and forth intended to make reel changes
seamless. Silent films were commonly projected at between 16 and 20 fps
(frames per second); a full reel of 1,000 feet of 35mm film could yield up to
15 minutes.1 Reel changes were placed where they would be less conspicuous,
and often (but not always) aligned with scene changes.
Establishing shots
Camera shots at varying distances with varying depths of field were possible.
An establishing shot might be a wide shot taken at a distance to show an
exterior to communicate a scene’s location. This convention continues today.
Music can coincide with an establishing shot to help set things up, so the audi-
ence better understands the location. You might want music to communicate
the location geographically (we’re in France), or its relation to a particular
character (this is Knock’s office), for example. The establishing shot gives
you a brief moment to set up a forthcoming scene.
Close-up
Mechanical conventions persist today: consider the close-up shot. Yet, close-
ups are slightly different in silent film: camera lenses in use at the time didn’t
always have the focal length they do now. In many silents, close-ups were
saved to show important plot points, such as the reveal of the Duke’s signet
ring in The Black Pirate (1926), for instance.
A close-up serves to visually magnify what is important. In a heavy-
handed way, a close-up shot forces our attention on something that should
not be missed (for reasons of plot), or is seen as a pay-off (voyeurism). This
Silent film conventions 5
forcefulness – studied as the male gaze by scholars such as Laura Mulvey2 –
became the object of some criticism even during the silent period.
Now that the Hollywood people are speaking out against the close-up
movie clinches [sic], the time seems ripe for the launching of an anti-
kissing movement all over the country. […] [I]t was the directors who
were to blame, and these are now coming around to understand that the
non-stop kiss, photographed in slow motion close-up, has lost its thrill, if
it ever had any.3
This article exhibits the prudishness that led to the censorial Motion Picture
Production Code or “Hays Code.”4 But it also documents perceived overuse
of the close-up in predictable moments or situations. Once technical issues
were solved, and lenses with increasing magnification readily available, film-
makers enjoyed the ability to get in closer and closer, and could choose how
often to change lenses.
For a composer, what does a close-up mean? When our visual attention is
forcibly directed somewhere, the question arises: do we want to reinforce that
musically? Does the shot need additional help? Or do we want to keep playing
the scene as it was? Or should we indicate something else that’s going on, like
a reaction to or a distraction from a reveal? Is there a nuanced read to make,
or does the music need to be “on the nose”?
So far, the director has been unable to tell his story without subtitle. […]
They play upon the imagination. They build a more vivid picture than the
action of the film. They enhance the story told in the part of the film which
follows the subtitle.6
The sub-title is the reading matter thrown on the screen at the beginning or
in the middle of a scene to bridge a break in the continuity or to emphasize
Silent film conventions 7
words or dialogue of a scene. It is sometimes called leader, sub-head or
caption. They all mean the same.7
Have as few sub-titles as possible. It has been said that when the continuity
of the picture drama will be so perfect as to dispense with all sub-titles,
that will be the millennium of the motion picture. There is no rule, how-
ever, to govern the number of sub-titles. A forceful sub-title at the psycho-
logical moment will bring out your scene.8
Much meaning must be expressed in a few words. People come to the pic-
ture house to see action, not to read it. […] Remember, every word you put
into your sub-titles costs the producer footage of the film, so express your
ideas concisely without making the brevity too obvious.9
Note the issue of cost, an additional reason why intertitles were favored above
subtitling through composite optical printing.
There’s a practical reason for contemporary music makers to take note of
intertitles. For a composer or ensemble, intertitles are useful topographical
markers. In the not unlikely event a player (or whole ensemble) gets lost or
misses a cue, intertitles clearly establish position in the film.
The race movies of the 1920s reflected the ambitions of the black bour-
geoisie who produced them. They urged black audiences to aspire to mid-
dle-class values and status, retailing black Horatio Alger success myths
and condemning the corruptions of ghetto existence.15
Such 1920s silent race movies coincided with the Harlem Renaissance and
the New Negro Movement; these films had to negotiate shifting cultural (and
commercial) divides and differences of opinion about representation, realism,
and idealism. The “uplift formula” could be problematic, misrepresenting the
harsh severity of insurmountable, real-life obstacles, and promoting an assim-
ilationist, capitalist agenda. These Horatio Alger myths were not the types of
progress everyone wanted glorified.
Depiction of mixed-race people was tellingly offensive. Actor, writer, and
critic Peter Noble, recalling “The Negro in Silent Films” in his landmark 1948
book, The Negro in Films, wrote:
In all the films made during this period dealing with octoroons and mulat-
tos the apparent shame and degradation of being even in the smallest
degree non-white was exploited to the full, with the obvious implication
that there was something practically sub-human in being black. Indeed,
in several productions the lesson seemed to be that for the unfortunate
Silent film conventions 13
mulatto only suicide provided a logical escape from a world in which to
be partially coloured was considered an even worse disgrace than to be a
full-blooded Negro.16
Programming suitability
Questions that this book must address include which films are acceptable
to perform, how to handle problematic scenes musically, and what should
inform those decisions.
Films whose basic premise or worldview is racist are best avoided. Many
scholars uphold The Sheik or The Birth of a Nation as examples of technically
advanced filmmaking, but captive general audiences cannot see technical
achievement without being subjected to triggering racism or being manipu-
lated to identify with racist protagonists. These films are best left for academic
study than public performance. The worst films are not difficult to spot. Many
others are harder to judge.
For films that teeter on the margins of acceptability or have limited prob-
lematic parts, there are a number of approaches. Consult the affected: if a
film stereotypes a particular ethnicity, go to that community and request guid-
ance. Remember, you can always choose to simply not do the film. I argue
films should be screened unaltered; it is not faithful to history or to cinema to
excise offending bits, even if you own the editing software to do so. Efforts
to sanitize (or abridge or colorize) film have been met with contempt, as they
only whitewash problematic bits, covering up difficult sections that deserve
our scrutiny.
If you decide to do a particular film, it is true that you can always give an
introduction before the performance and explain what people will see. I con-
sider this given. I wish to entertain musical possibilities within your score: it is
not enough to simply make excuses to an audience; one must handle difficult
scenes with delicacy.
While we cannot deny onscreen racism, we should not purposefully accen-
tuate it either. I would caution composers to track other things transpiring
in a scene, or aim for a more subdued reading. Don’t play racist caricatures
and jokes. While this may deviate from filmmakers’ original intentions, they
won’t land. Let them slide; find something else to hit.
Consider the opium den in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde – probably the most
problematic scene in an otherwise relatively inoffensive film. This vignette
presents a number of Chinese or “oriental” stereotypes in bit parts in the
14 Silent film conventions
opium den. Rather than accentuating Chinese stereotypes, a better musical
approach is to hit the drug-induced stupor and narcotic vibe, or to keep the
music focused on Jekyll/Hyde’s descent into sinfulness. There is enough
going on that you don’t need to resort to gimmicky “Chinese music.”
One might consider the phenomenon of new opera productions that attempt
to set problematic or ideological texts into contemporary environments, and to
offer new or different insights into the text. This is a difficult analogy because,
without altering the film itself (again, not advised under any circumstances),
the visual element takes precedence to an audience. Music may distract but
cannot erase overtly offensive racism or sexism.
Find a scene with a man and a woman, or both male and female char-
acters. Write two summaries of the scene: one as you imagine it per-
ceived by a male character, and one as you imagine it from a female
character’s point of view. Consider the differing musical opportunities
each summary suggests.
Note, this exercise can be performed for any two characters of dif-
ferent backgrounds.
Silent film conventions 15
Queerness
Cinema historian Vito Russo noted that early silent films contained numerous
portrayals of homosexuality, from “the harmless sissy” comedic stereotype, to
titillating lesbian innuendo, to effeminate foils (or punching bags) for violent and
fragile masculinity. There were contrasting films that were provocative, celebra-
tory, advocative, or that presented gender nonconforming or nonbinary people,
such as Different from the Others (1919, Germany, Anders als die Andern) or
Salomé (1923). Hitchcock’s The Lodger (1927, UK) initially presents the hero
as “queer” but as a “gentleman” nevertheless (ca. 00:31:30). As much as Russo
accentuated period homophobia, his research reveals broad international repre-
sentation of a variety of perspectives, some bigoted, some less so.17
The spectrum of queer representation, even if opaque at times, provides
opportunities for interpretation or highlighting. Consider the homosocial male
environment of The Black Pirate and its parade of scantily clad, muscular
sailors.18 What is the basis for all that camaraderie?
Another fascinating example is the homoeroticism of Count Orlock’s
bloodlust for young Hutter in Nosferatu. This is not unintentional; Russo
noted that F. W. Murnau was a gay director who sublimated his sexuality into
subversive horror and fantasy films.19
It would be disastrous to play these moments in a musically campy way.
Dropping a disco beat might be funny, but it would tank the director’s inten-
tions, something I advocate against, even if film funning is a practice with a
long history and its own fans.
I encourage you to use awareness of queerness in silent film to develop
rich, deep, layered, and complex understandings and musical portrayals of
characters and situations. There has been a tendency for contemporary scores
to treat silent film as monochromatic and simplistic. Music can suggest greater
depths and broader interpretations. The benefit of this approach is that it will
make your presentation of a film more compelling.
Acting style
This section examines highly stylized acting methods seen in silent films.
Studying silent film acting helps us correctly interpret story, character motiva-
tions, and a director’s intentions. We can then apply this understanding to our
musical score. Subtleties of acting performance create musical opportunities
for composers who recognize them.
Early magic lantern and picture shows showcased movement, rather than
text. Subsequent motion pictures evolved from these visual forms; motion
pictures developed within the context of scientific and technological innova-
tion, yet maintained ties to pantomime and theater. Silent films employed styl-
ized acting methods, replete with exaggerated gestures. These acting styles
were carefully studied and performed.
16 Silent film conventions
Because filmmakers tried to transmit as much information as possi-
ble through performance without leaning too heavily on intertitles, a dra-
matic, communicative acting style was preferred, largely based on the
Delsarte System of Expression and other nineteenth-century theatrical
approaches, such as those developed by Benoît-Constant Coquelin, Émile
Jaques-Dalcroze, Sir Charles Bell, and even Charles Darwin. A schism in
nineteenth-century schools of theatrical acting put “controlled” acting in
opposition to “inspired” acting; “controlled” acting won out, connecting act-
ing to science, discipline, and practiced performance, and this influenced cin-
ema internationally.
One might observe that France was home to both the development of the
motion picture (the Lumière brothers; Gaumont, the first film company) and
the art of the mime. It’s easy to assume that miming therefore influenced
cinema acting style; there is some truth to this, but the story is more complex.
François Delsarte’s System of Expression predated film and endeavored to
catalog and define dramatic gestures. The telegraphing of information through
oversized gestures proved highly useful for film. Similarly, Dalcroze imag-
ined Wagner’s German operas performed in Paris in an era before supertitles,
and he developed ways to coach opera singers to act and gesture so a French
audience could understand the drama. This objective easily extended to acting
for silent film, so that film actors could be understood without audible speech.
The scientific cataloging of motion and gesture, the notion of acting as
technology, the correlation of poses or “attitudes” with emotions, and the
desire for “controlled” acting, all aligned to shape acting style in silent film.
Delsarte
Well before the advent of film, French singer and acting coach François
Delsarte (1811–71) gained international prominence. During the technology-
fascinated nineteenth century, Delsarte attempted to catalog the many “atti-
tudes” or poses of the body, with special attention given to the arms, face, and
hands. This was seen as a scientific endeavor.20 Delsarte was a charismatic
coach and public speaker; he could be rambling, impromptu, and vague, and
although he didn’t actually publish much himself, he made people think about
what to do with his catalog of poses.
In the United States, Delsarte’s thoughts were transcribed, translated, and
written up by Genevieve Stebbins in 1885.21 Delsarte System of Expression
was “translated from unpublished manuscripts.”22 Stebbins translated
Delsarte’s French word attitudes as “attitudes,” rather than “poses” – the sim-
pler, more accurate, literal translation – probably because “attitudes” sounded
more scientific and erudite. Heavily illustrated, the book describes poses,
movements, and exercises.
These poses or “attitudes” were numerous and complex. Figure 1.1 cata-
logs some of the positions of the head. Imagine that an actor might train to
Silent film conventions 17
move between these positions, while being aware of each one. Figure 1.2 is
a still frame from Murnau’s Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans. Actress Janet
Gaynor tilts her head, trying to get the Man’s attention. Does her pose cor-
relate to any of the Delsarte attitudes?
Delsarte parsed the eye into descriptions of the brow, the upper lid, the
lower lid, and the eyeball itself. “By combining nine of the brow with nine of
the lid eighty-one distinct combinations can be made.”23 Figure 1.3 shows nine
“simple combinations of upper lid and brow.” Compare these to the film still,
Figure 1.4, where character actor J. Farrell MacDonald, as The Photographer
18 Silent film conventions
in Sunrise, arches his brow dramatically in a reaction shot. How would you
describe his mood? What do you think he might be thinking?
Delsarte described combinations of gestures and important body move-
ments. He attempted to codify functions and meanings associated with spe-
cific gestures and movements. “The functions of the hand” were listed:
1. To define or indicate;
2. To affirm or deny;
3. To mold or detect;
4. To conceal or reveal;
5. To surrender or hold;
6. To accept or reject;
7. To inquire or acquire;
8. To support or protect;
9. To caress or assail.24
Figure 1.3 “Simple Combinations of Upper Lid and Brow.” Stebbins (1885) p. 152.
Figure 1.5 The Black Pirate. The Lieutenant closes his fist around the short straw.
Silent film conventions 21
Exercise XIV. Place your hand on your heart, the moral or affectional zone,
and repeat: “Or this true heart with treacherous revolt turn to another.”27
This gesture appears often in silent film. In this reaction shot (Figure 1.8)
from Metropolis (1927), Freder, seeing Maria’s entrance, clasps his hands to
22 Silent film conventions
Figure 1.7 D
r. Jekyll rejects the impulse to take the potion. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
(1920).
Figure 1.9 Florian and Miriam share a passionate moment in The Golem (1920).
his heart, a symbol of his falling in love. (Note how his companion poses to
hold him back, advising restraint). The same gesture appears in The Golem
(Figure 1.9), where Florian and Miriam share a passionate moment, their
hands indicating their mutual love. It’s important to note that this gesture is
not gendered. Both men and women made this gesture.
Delsarte was internationally influential well beyond the nineteenth-cen-
tury theatrical period during which he cataloged gestures. His work is now in
the public domain, and many more illustrations and diagrams can be found
online. I recommend these not because a composer needs to learn all these
gestures, but because a composer will benefit from realizing the depth and
extent to which acting was studied and structured.
Dalcroze
Swiss composer and educator Émile Jaques-Dalcroze (1865–1950) created
an educational system eventually known as “eurhythmics” that used move-
ment to teach musical arts from ear training to gesture for opera performance.
Dalcroze developed what he called “Rhythmic Gymnastics” (in contrast to
Delsarte’s “Aesthetic Gymnastics”28) throughout the 1890s while teaching at
the Conservatory of Music in Geneva. In 1906, his influential book Méthode
Jaques-Dalcroze: Gymnastique Rythmique was published in French and
German.29 Figure 1.10 shows a classic Dalcroze Rhythmic Gymnastics exer-
cise, which emphasizes body control and coordination.
While Dalcroze focused on acting for opera, his ideas influenced direc-
tion for cinema. Dalcroze thought that acting should follow rhythm, a pretty
straightforward idea for opera, and one that extrapolated well to silent film.
Dalcroze wrote:
Controlled acting
Jo Pennington advocated “Controlled Acting,”35 an approach promoted by
Benoît-Constant Coquelin (1841–1909), a French actor of tremendous promi-
nence who wrote extensively about acting and theater. In a section titled
“Controlled Emotion of the Actor,”36 Pennington directly quotes Coquelin,
who in 1880 described a schism in acting philosophy:
The theatrical world is divided into two opposing camps in regard to the
question whether the actor should partake of the passions of his rôle, –
weep, to draw tears, – or whether he should remain master of himself
throughout the most impassioned and violent action on the part of the char-
acter which he represents; in a word, remain unmoved himself, the more
surely to move others.37
This is why the true actor is always ready for action. He can take up his
part, no matter when, and instantly excite the desired effect. He commands
us to laugh, to weep, to shiver with fear. He needs not wait until he experi-
ences these emotions himself, or for grace from above to enlighten him.38
Coquelin says “the true actor is always ready for action”; this would prove
especially important in cinema when cameras roll and the director shouts,
“Action!” The film actor must perform on command.
Pennington, quoting Coquelin, described “Controlled Acting”:
These “nerves, muscles” reflect the poses described by Delsarte and a focus on
anatomy described by Sir Charles Bell, discussed further below. Pennington
emphasized pitfalls of “inspired” acting, presenting an argument paraphrased
directly from Coquelin:
Similarly, if you play your musical live score to a silent film, you do not need
to be in the “depths of despair” to play a sad theme or moment.
The allegory comparing acting to musicianship appeared in other acting
books of the time, such as Screen Acting (1922). A chapter on “The Mechanics
of Emotion” describes controlled acting based on scientific research and
methodology:
[T]he technique of the actor bears much the same relation to his finished
performances as five finger exercises and scales bear to the playing of a
concerto. Technique is the scientific equipment of the actor – the frame-
work on which his work is built. And it’s this science – the mechanics of
emotion – that every young actor must study diligently if he would build
his career on a firm foundation.41
In keeping with the fascination with science, here acting, too, is placed within
a scientific paradigm “that every young actor must study diligently.” Screen
Acting cites and recommends other scientific sources to support its arguments:
Fortunately there are men who had spent their lives in observing the effect
of various emotions on men and animals and the results of their investiga-
tions have been published and are available to students of acting. Probably
the most widely read book on this subject among professional actors
is “The Anatomy and Philosophy of Expression” by Bell. And another
source of much helpful information on this subject is Darwin’s “Emotions
in Man and Animals.”42
28 Silent film conventions
Sir Charles Bell (1774–1842) was trained in painting, anatomy, and surgery.
His Essays on the Anatomy of Expression in Painting (1806) stressed the
importance of understanding anatomy when depicting expression. A second
edition titled Essays on the Anatomy and Philosophy of Expression came out
in 1824. The third edition, published posthumously in 1844, was expanded
and entitled The Anatomy and Philosophy of Expression as Connected with
the Fine Arts. New editions came out every few years throughout the century,
such was its influence and popularity.43
Illustrations and essays in Bell’s book describe in detail the expression of
a wide variety of emotions and reactions: laughter, weeping, grief, pain, fear,
despair, jealousy, joy, rage, remorse, madness, and others. This book formed
a template for actors. Compare Figure 1.11, “Fear with wonder” from Bell to
John Barrymore’s expression (Figure 1.12) as his potion proves successful in
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Screen Acting pointed readers to Bell’s book – written when, like Delsarte,
cataloging expression was seen as a scientific, technological pursuit – and
then recommended applying these gestures in a systematic, controlled way.
Screen Acting critiqued the “inspired” acting decried by Pennington:
The person who “acts all over the place” does not succeed in making the
audience feel the emotion which he is portraying; he simply makes himself
Figure 1.12 J ohn Barrymore reacts to the success of the potion in Dr. Jekyll and Mr.
Hyde (1920).
absurd. To know just which are the significant movements that will convey
an emotion’s poignant appeal, to use these, and no others – that is one of
the secrets of emotional acting.44
Screen Acting advocated studying movements from Bell and Darwin, selecting
them judiciously, and then using them in a controlled technique to convey emo-
tion, rather than just acting out. The thinking was that science determined these
poses and gestures, and therefore, that’s what the actor should learn and perform.
Bell thought that emotions and emotive expressions were uniquely human.
Charles Darwin did not agree and responded in his own 1872 book, The
Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals.45 It’s fascinating to see evo-
lutionary theorist Darwin thrust forward as a guide for actors, but so he was.
Furthermore, Screen Acting took Darwin’s text verbatim as a source for acting
exercises: “Following is his list of questions, a list that should be carefully
studied.”46 Some of these questions appear below as Exercises.
Try these acting exercises from Screen Acting (1922) which are directly
taken from Charles Darwin’s The Expression of Emotion in Man and
Animals (1872 pp. 15–16).
30 Silent film conventions
Comedy
Comedic acting was physical and demanding. Daisy Doodad’s Dial (1914),
directed by and starring Florence Turner, uses a “face making competition”
as a setup to showcase Turner’s abilities. Turner pulls her face in multiple
expressions and contortions, crossing and circling her eyes (Figure 1.13).
These comedic expressions were rehearsed to perfection; like silent dramatic
gestures, they are not haphazard.
Inez and Helen Klumph, authors of Screen Acting, wrote of the demands
of comedic acting:
[Comedian and actor] Ben Turpin believes that the most important req-
uisite of a comedian is a supple, expressive body. The absurd postures
Figure 1.13 Florence Turner makes a face in Daisy Doodad’s Dial (1914).
Silent film conventions 31
he strikes are not accidental by any means; they are each and every one
worked out before a mirror.47
Physical acting was an important part of silent comedy. Dry wit and wordplay
are less common in silent film than in sound film; silent film excels in slapstick,
screwball comedy, parody, physical comedy, and comedies of errors. Yet audi-
ences today often miss things in silent films that were meant to be funny.
Sunrise is upheld as such a sacred, watershed film that composers and
audiences often miss the funny bits: the runaway pig, the drunken cook, the
couple’s ignorance of the Venus de Milo, the flirtatious old man at the end.
Similarly, many bit parts in The Black Pirate are quite comical, even if the
overall film is a swashbuckling adventure.
You should be aware of intentional comedy in films. As a composer con-
sidering musical approaches, you may wish to downplay it, accentuating the
underlying narrative; or you may wish to really yuk it up. A comedic moment
may need help, or it may not. But you should recognize it when it’s there.
Find a silent dramatic film. Watch closely for moments of comedy, and
choose two or three. (They can be short and subtle.)
1. Why are they in the film? Do you get a sense of comic relief, or not?
Do they feel realistic within the world of the film?
2. Consider different ways of scoring them. How much emphasis
could you give them? Try writing two to three different musical
options for each one. Do they detract from the film? Do they make
these little moments pop? Can you overdo it? If you score through
without hitting the comedy, what is the effect? What works best in
each case, and why?
Find a short scene or sequence, about two minutes long, which has
two to three characters using controlled acting with clear gestures, and
preferably few or no intertitles.
1. See if you can use standard silent film gestures to tell the story with-
out spoken dialogue.
2. Are there new contemporary gestures (like dabbing, for example)
that might be incorporated? What are their meanings?
Special effects
Silent films are rich with special effects; ingenious tricks and trade secrets
vividly brought to life the fantastic and the surreal. There were no computer
graphics or digital intermediates, but there were possibilities of increasingly
Silent film conventions 33
complex composite optical printing (as seen in Sunrise: A Song of Two
Humans). Music can work with special effects to make them more believable
and compelling.
Raymond Fielding, in his iconic mid-century manual of special effects
cinematography, classified special effects in three ways: in-camera effects,
laboratory processes, and combinations of the two.48
With in-camera effects, audiences saw onscreen something actually seen
and filmed through a camera. Fielding described basic in-camera effects as
changes in speed, position, or direction; image distortions; optical transi-
tions; superimpositions; and day-for-night photography. Image replacement
effects include split-screen photography, in-camera matte shots, and shots
made using glass or mirrors. The use of miniatures is an in-camera special
effect.
Laboratory effects include bi-pack printing, optical printing, traveling
mattes, and aerial image printing. These effects were done in the laboratory
with film negatives. Combination techniques include background projection,
using either rear or front projection.
I lack space to explain special effects in depth; one authoritative discussion
of silent era special effects is “The Evolution of Special Visual Effects” in The
ASC Treasury of Visual Effects.49 For the purposes of this book, we consider
how special effects might impact our musical score.
Special effects were compelling to period audiences not because they were
fooled into thinking some spectacle had actually happened, but because it was
something they had never seen before. There was no standard of comparison
for movie magic. The grotesque giant spider in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (ca.
01:08:40) is unsettling even today, although it looks far from real; special
effects artist George E. Turner called this “one of the most terrifying moments
in silent cinema.”50 It deserves to be amplified musically, rather than mocked
as camp.
The magic of special effects, at its best, helps advance the narrative, rather
than being gratuitous. Even if an audience recognizes a special effect, the sus-
pension of disbelief makes the film more enjoyable. In a critique of underwa-
ter sea swimmers in The Black Pirate (ca. 01:25:20), a period reviewer noted:
The audience may scream with laughter at the ridiculous situation of hun-
dreds of men swimming under water without a bubble rising to the surface,
but they applaud, as well.51
Your audience may applaud as well if you play special effects sequences as if
they are real, treating them with the intention to help create the desired effect.
If hundreds of men are meant to be swimming underwater, you can make
environmental sounds (discussed in Chapter 2) that will help place them (and
the audience) in watery surroundings. Whatever the special effect is, you may
be inspired to create music that bolsters the effect and the story around it.
34 Silent film conventions
Find a short scene or sequence with some kind of special effect, model,
or optical effect.
1. Write some music that imitates or follows the special effect itself.
2. Write some music that downplays or ignores the effect, for example,
focusing on a character, emotion, theme, or situation, anything ger-
mane apart from the special effect itself.
3. Write some music that tracks the special effect’s narrative purpose;
in other words, it doesn’t quite imitate the effect, but tries to bolster
whatever situation called for the effect to be used.
Editing conventions
Understanding film editing and awareness of editing techniques helps inform
our decisions in creating a musical score that connects with a film.
In his book, In the Blink of an Eye: A Perspective on Film Editing, Oscar-
winning editor Walter Murch explained how silent period editing relied on
memory and an intuitive sense of time. Editing tools back then were rudimen-
tary compared to later sound-era machinery – such as the Moviola, Steenbeck,
or KEM – which in turn were superseded by today’s computer systems. Murch
compared the silent era editing room to a “tailor’s shop”:
In the first quarter of the twentieth century, the film editor’s room was
a quiet place, equipped only with a rewind bench, a pair of scissors, a
magnifying glass, and the knowledge that the distance from the tip of
one’s nose to the fingers of the outstretched hand represented about three
seconds. In those manual, pre-mechanical days – roughly 1900–1925 –
the cutting room was a relatively tranquil tailor’s shop in which time was
the cloth.52
The editing process was laborious, requiring good memory and intuition.
“Manual,” of course, means film editing was done directly by hand; mechani-
cal systems took over towards the end of the silent era (Murch estimates by
1925; note that late silent films are technically advanced, and early sound
shoots often simplified to accommodate clunky new sound equipment).
Murch continued his description of the 1900–25 period manual film editing:
Silent film conventions 35
The editor had seen the film projected when it first came from the labora-
tory, and now she (many editors in those days were women) re-exam-
ined the still frames with a magnifying glass, recalling how they looked
in motion, and cut with scissors where she thought correct. Patiently and
somewhat intuitively, she stitched the fabric of her film together, joining
with paper clips the shots that were to be later cemented together by a
technician down the hall.
She then projected the assembly with the director and producer, took
notes, and returned to her room to make further adjustments, shortening
this and lengthening that, like a second fitting of a suit. This new version
was projected in turn, and the cycle was repeated over and over until the fit
was as perfect as she could make it.53
While flatbed editors (and now computers) replaced scissors, the language
and techniques of film editing were already in use in the silent period: estab-
lishing shots, exteriors preceding interiors, master shots, montages, parallel
action, close-ups, match cuts, visual rhythm and pacing, matching eye trace
between shots – a shared editorial practice allows us to treat silents like con-
temporary film.
Composing and performing live music for silent film is likewise laborious,
requiring good memory and intuition, especially if you eschew click tracks
and computers. The benefit of live human synchronization is that it forces you
to be and play in the moment, and I believe that audiences sense that excite-
ment and mental concentration.
Bridging transitions
Editing for narrative film frequently adheres to a storytelling syntax estab-
lished during the silent era. To show a scene – a concept itself derived from
the theater – a standard sequence of shots might begin like this: an estab-
lishing shot, often an exterior shot, shows us where the scene takes place.
An interior shot brings us inside. A master shot – a single continuous take
of an entire scene, showing all the actors within the frame – is interspersed
with close-ups, reaction shots, and medium shots that help break up visual
monotony and tell the story in a more engaging way. The pacing of these cuts
establishes a visual rhythm.
Music can help smooth and bridge these cuts and transitions. The visual
rhythm might help suggest a tempo for the music, how fast or slow the scene
should feel. Music can also help smooth and bridge transitions in and out of
subsequent scenes. Chapter 2 Scene divisions discusses transitions between
scenes in greater detail. Music can lead us gently into a new scene, can smooth
a rough edit, and can help make a scene’s ending feel conclusive.
36 Silent film conventions
Find a short sequence with a change of scene. Look closely at the scene
change.
1. Write music that ends with the first scene, and a new piece that
begins with the second scene.
2. Write music that ends before the scene change, and a new piece that
starts early, so it prelaps or leads us into the next scene.
3. Write music that lingers across the scene change, ending as we are
already into the next scene.
4. Write music that takes the third approach, but that affects some kind
of musical transition to mark the scene change.
Which approach worked best? What made it work, or not work? Would
a different set of scenes yield different results? What are some factors
that might affect the choice of approach?
Editing tricks
Beyond bridging transitions and reinforcing continuity, editing can create cin-
ematic sleights of hand. Author and photographer Kalton C. Lahue discussed
editing tricks used in fight scenes in silent serials – exciting, one-reel shorts
that often ended in a cliffhanger so audiences would return to the theater to see
the next episode. A director wanted punches to come fast and heavy.
What we saw on the screen was given impact and speed by an editing
trick. The cutter removed every third or fourth frame from the sequence
which showed moving fists. Used in moderation, this technique produced
realistic effects when projected.57
[In order to capture a] conclusive blow, the cameras were stopped. Both
men took up predetermined positions at the edge of the cliff and Bart
leaned backward as far as possible. Freddie placed his fist on Bart’s jaw
and let it rest there lightly. With the cameras turning backward, he sud-
denly pulled it away. […] A rapid cut-in view from another angle, usually
below and at a distance, showed a dummy or stuntman representing Bart
going over the cliff to his doom. Carefully handled, it was most effective.58
The net effect of this sequence is to show Freddie punching Bart so hard he
reels off a cliff. It’s a good example of how editing works in tandem with spe-
cial effects and multiple angles to achieve the desired effect. Music can help
add excitement and match the quick pace of the action.
How well does music help improve the film? Do different kinds of
music do a better job at covering the damaged footage?
Notes
1 The talkies standardized 24fps because of the need for increased fidelity for
sound. See Kawin, Bruce F. (1992). How Movies Work. pp. 46–7. (Berkeley, CA:
University of California Press).
2 See Mulvey, Laura. (1989). Visual and Other Pleasures. (London: Palgrave
Macmillan).
3 Democrat and Chronicle. “The Movie Close-up.” November 27, 1928. Page 16.
(Rochester, NY).
4 See especially Schumach, Murray. (1964). The Face on the Cutting Room Floor:
The Story of Movie and Television Censorship. (New York: William Morrow and
Company).
5 Des Moines Tribune. “Write a Sub Title for Movie and Win Prize.” December 7,
1921. Page 1. (Des Moines, IA).
6 The Winnipeg Tribune. “Writing in of Subtitles is Fine Art.” November 26, 1921.
Screen, Page 1. (Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada).
7 Philpott, Robert. “Movie Contest Leads.” The Sacramento Star. July 25, 1918.
Page 2. (Sacramento, CA).
8 Ibid.
9 Ibid.
10 Del Giorno, Bette J. “The Impact of Changing Scientific Knowledge on Science
Education in the United States since 1850” in Science Education, Vol. 53, Issue 3
(1969), pp. 191–5.
11 Winter, J. M. “Britain’s ‘Lost Generation’ of the First World War” in Population
Studies, Vol. 31, No. 3 (Nov., 1977), pp. 449−66. (Taylor & Francis, Ltd.).
12 Burwell, Carter. “Orchestrating War” in Harper’s, February 2004, pp. 15–19.
13 Woll, Allen L., and Miller, Randall M. (1987). Ethnic and Racial Images in
American Film and Television: Historical Essays and Bibliography. (New York:
Garland Publishing, Inc.). p. 40.
14 Ibid.
15 Ibid. pp. 39–44.
40 Silent film conventions
16 Noble, Peter. (1948). The Negro in Films. (London: Skelton Robinson). p. 29.
17 Russo, Vito. (1981). The Celluloid Closet. (New York: Harper & Row). pp 7–30.
18 Consider Mel Brooks’ interrogation of the homosexuality of background studio
contract actors presented in the “French Mistake” sequence of Blazing Saddles, dis-
cussed in Dubowsky, Jack Curtis. (2016). Intersecting Film, Music, and Queerness.
(Basingstoke: Palgrave), pp. 208–23.
19 Russo, Vito. The Celluloid Closet. 1981. (New York: Harper & Row). p. 52.
20 Delsarte, François. (1887). “Delsarte’s Address Before the Philotechnic Society” in
Delsarte System of Expression, Second Edition by Genevieve Stebbins. (New York:
Edgar S. Werner). p. LIV.
21 Stebbins, Genevieve. (1885). Delsarte System of Dramatic Expression. 1886. (New
York: Edgar S. Werner). See copyright notice date on first edition.
22 Stebbins, Genevieve. (1885). Delsarte System of Expression. Second Edition. 1887.
(New York: Edgar S. Werner). See title page.
23 Ibid. p. 153.
24 Ibid. pp. 89–90.
25 Ibid. p. 90.
26 Ibid. p. 91.
27 Ibid. p. 52.
28 Ibid. pp. 12, 28, 40.
29 Jaques-Dalcroze, Émile. (1906). Méthode Jaques-Dalcroze: Gymnastique
Rythmique. (Neuchâtel: Imprimerie Delachaux & Niestlé S. A.).
30 Jaques-Dalcroze, Émile. (1921). Rhythm, Music, and Education. Translated by
Harold F. Rubinstein. (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons). p. 200. (Emphasis in origi-
nal.)
31 d’Udine, Jean. (1910). L’art et le geste. (Paris: Librairies Félix Alcan et Guillaumin
Réunies). (Translation mine.)
32 Ibid., pp. 87, 279.
33 Yampolsky, Mikhail. (1996). “Kuleshov’s Experiments and the New Anthropology
of the Actor” in Silent Film. Edited and with an introduction by Richard Abel. (New
Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press). p. 46.
34 Ibid.
35 Pennington, Jo. (1925). The Importance of Being Rhythmic: A Study of the
Principles of Dalcroze Eurythmics Applied to General Education and to the Arts
of Music, Dancing and Acting. Based on and Adapted from “Rhythm, Music and
Education” by Émile Jaques-Dalcroze. (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons). p. 99.
36 Ibid., p. 96.
37 Coquelin, C. (1880). L’art et le comédien. (Paris: Librairie Paul Ollendorff). p. 27;
Also in Coquelin, C. (1881). The Actor and His Art. Translated by Abby Langdon
Alger. (Boston, MA: Roberts Brothers). p. 26.
38 Coquelin (1881) p. 28.
39 Pennington (1925) p. 99.
40 –Pennington (1925) p. 97; this paraphrases Coquelin (1881) pp. 31–2.
41 Klumph, Inez and Helen. (1922). Screen Acting: Its Requirements and Rewards.
(New York: Falk Publishing Co., Inc.). p. 125.
42 Ibid., p. 126.
43 Hughes, Sean and Gardner-Thorpe, Christopher. (2022). “Charles Bell’s (1774–
1842) Contribution to Our Understanding of Facial Expression” in Journal of
Medical Biography. DOI: 10.1177/0967772020980233
44 Klumph, Inez and Helen. (1922). p. 194.
45 Darwin, Charles. (1872). The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals.
(London: John Murray).
46 Klumph, Inez and Helen. (1922). pp. 127–8.
47 Ibid., p. 200.
Silent film conventions 41
48 Fielding, Raymond. (1972). The Technique of Special Effects Cinematography.
Third Edition. (London and Boston, MA: Focal Press).
49 Turner, George E. (1983). “The Evolution of Special Visual Effects” in The ASC
Treasury of Visual Effects. Edited by George E. Turner. (Hollywood, CA: American
Society of Cinematographers).
50 Ibid., p. 36.
51 The Boston Globe. “Douglas Fairbanks in ‘The Black Pirate.’” May 11, 1926. Page
25. (Boston, MA).
52 Murch, Walter. (2001). In the Blink of an Eye: A Perspective on Film Editing.
Second Edition. (Los Angeles, CA: Silman-James Press). p. 75.
53 Ibid., pp. 75–6.
54 Spottiswoode, Raymond. (1951). Film and Its Techniques. (London: Faber and
Faber). p. 104.
55 Ibid., p. 105.
56 Ibid., p. 105.
57 Lahue, Kalton C. (1968). Bound and Gagged. (Cranbury, NJ: A. S. Barnes and Co.,
Inc.). pp. 121–2.
58 Ibid., pp. 122–3.
Bibliography
Altman, Rick. (2008). A Theory of Narrative (New York: Columbia University Press).
Bell, Sir Charles. (1806). Essays on the Anatomy of Expression in Painting (London:
C. Whittingham).
Bell, Sir Charles. (1824). Essays on the Anatomy and Philosophy of Expression
(London: John Murray.)
Bell, Sir Charles. (1844). The Anatomy and Philosophy of Expression as Connected
with the Fine Arts (London: John Murray) (This is considered the Third Edition;
it is followed by other editions, including: Fourth Edition (1847) (London: John
Murray); Sixth Edition (1872) (London: Henry G. Bohn).
Bell, Sir Charles. (1885). The Anatomy and Philosophy of Expression as Connected
with the Fine Arts, Seventh Edition, Revised (London: George Bell and Sons).
Bogle, Donald. (2001). Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies, & Bucks: An Interpretive
History of Blacks in American Films, Fourth Edition (New York: Continuum).
The Boston Globe. (1926, May 11). “Douglas Fairbanks in ‘The Black Pirate.’”
(Boston, MA), p. 25.
Burwell, Carter. (2004, February). “Orchestrating War.” Harper’s, pp. 15–19.
Coquelin, C. (1880). L’art et le comédien (Paris: Librairie Paul Ollendorff).
Coquelin, C. (1881). The Actor and His Art. Translated by Abby Langdon Alger
(Boston, MA: Roberts Brothers).
Darwin, Charles. (1872). The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals (London:
John Murray).
Del Giorno, Bette J. (1969). “The Impact of Changing Scientific Knowledge on Science
Education in the United States Since 1850.” Science Education, Vol. 53, No. 3, pp.
191–5.
Democrat and Chronicle. (1928, November 27). “The Movie Close-Up.” (Rochester,
NY), p. 16.
Des Moines Tribune. (1921, December 7). “Write a Sub Title for Movie and Win
Prize.” (Des Moines, IA), p. 1.
42 Silent film conventions
Winnepeg Tribune. (1921, November 26). “Writing in of Subtitles is Fine Art.” Screen
[section] (Winnepeg, Manitoba, Canada), p. 1.
Winter, J. M. (1977, November). “Britain’s “Lost Generation” of the First World War.”
Population Studies, Vol. 31, No. 3, pp. 449–66 (Taylor & Francis, Ltd.).
Woll, Allen L. and Miller, Randall M. (1987). Ethnic and Racial Images in American
Film and Television: Historical Essays and Bibliography (New York: Garland
Publishing, Inc.), pp. 39–44.
Yampolsky, Mikhail. (1996). “Kuleshov’s Experiments and the New Anthropology of
the Actor.” In Silent Film, Edited and with an introduction by Richard Abel (New
Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press).
2 Consider your film
Studying and understanding a period silent film is the first step towards creat-
ing a new score. A nuanced, accurate reading of silent film facilitates a com-
pelling original score.
This book argues that a live score works best when it supports the
film, when film and music work together. Silent film can and has been
exploited as a visual backdrop for musical self-indulgence or noodling.
But for an audience, such navel-gazing will never be as compelling
as when story and visual image are centered and uplifted by carefully
crafted music.
Filmmakers and musicians have advocated this film-centric approach as
long as there has been film itself. A popular weekly periodical, The Moving
Picture News, advised musical accompanists in 1911:
In order to properly play for pictures, you must at all times consider that
you are a part of the audience, and watch intently for every little detail
or suggestion that will help you lend that atmosphere of realism to the
picture.1
DOI: 10.4324/9781003254447-2
Consider your film 45
Formalist reading
A formalist reading privileges the original film as text, focusing attention on
the world created within the film. Without sinking too deep into film theory,
here are some important takeaway points.
British film scholar Ian Christie, in discussing “Formalism and neo-for-
malism,” noted that formalism “was born, historically, of the desire to find an
objective or scientific basis for literary criticism.”2 This objectivity was found
within the text itself. Christie explained, “Formalist critical tools are still used
[…] by film theorists concerned with analyzing the structure of narration.”3
Formalists made a distinction between “story” and “plot” (as discussed in
Chapter 1); the story being “an imaginary sequence of events” while the plot
“provides the actual narrative pattern of the work, or ‘story-as-told.’”4
Formalism suggests that focusing on the “story-as-told” will help us arrive
at an “objective” interpretation of the film. Prioritizing a careful formalist
reading – rather than a clever reinterpretation – approximates how a profes-
sional media composer works with a director today: respecting the director’s
intent and vision. Imagine that it is your job to understand and support a silent
film’s director’s original vision as it is suggested by the film itself.
Consider F. W. Murnau’s Nosferatu. Many other vampire films centering
Dracula were made after Nosferatu. They do not matter. Corny tropes of bats
and garlic pedaled heavily in later films should not be a point of reference.
A composer could reinterpret Nosferatu in a clever way: maybe Knock is
the good guy trying to save Orlock’s dying race from extinction – but that’s
not Murnau’s Nosferatu. While that might be a novel interpretation, it disre-
spects Murnau’s film, as would playing the film for laughs. At the same time,
some musical scores gloss over truly comedic moments in Nosferatu: Knock
hiding behind a tree stump, or a dockworker trying to smash a rat that bit him.
So, a score that only sees Nosferatu as dark and heavy is likewise missing the
“story-as-told.” (Comedy is further discussed in Chapter 3.)
A formalist reading helps situate a new score within the director’s vision
and within the world created by the film, rather than commenting on it from
without. The importance of formalism and recognizing where comedy is
appropriate – and where it is not – brings us to a brief digression on the prac-
tice of film funning.
Film funning
This book actively discourages film funning, a period practice in the silent
era, where cinema accompanists, typically pianists or organists, would use
music to mock a film. These accompanists would choose inappropriate musi-
cal selections that used jokey references or deliberately clashed with filmmak-
ers’ intentions. Descendants of this approach include Carl Stalling’s musical
quotations in Warner Bros. cartoons, and the Mystery Science Theater 3000
46 Consider your film
comedy series. Note that Stalling’s musical witticisms served to broaden the
appeal of children’s cartoons that were already comedies to adults and to
expedite his scoring process by recycling existing compositions.5
Disdain for film funning dates as early as its implementation. In 1911, The
Moving Picture News advised accompanists:
Do not at any time try to burlesque a picture or produce comedy yourself
where none is intended, as it only cheapens the value of your music to
those who know how it should be played – and the others will like any
kind you play.6
The Moving Picture News reiterated this stance in subsequent issues.7 A multi-
tude of reasons justify their advice: film funning deflates or devalues the film;
any music suffices as long as it shits on the film for laughs; it doesn’t contrib-
ute to the cinematic experience; it takes the audience out of the film; it exploits
low hanging fruit musically and comedically. Film funning, while a persistent
temptation to novices today, fell out of favor with the rise of the feature film.8
Another argument against film funning today is the idea of stewardship. A
composer should bear some responsibility towards creators long passed who
can no longer defend their work themselves. Copyrights have long expired;
deceased filmmakers cannot exert creative control over what you do or how
you exploit their work. While this gives us opportunities to create new scores
(and some room to create our own readings of a film), we should also act as
good stewards of a work, to preserve or enhance its reputation, and encourage
others to enjoy and respect it.
1. Try doing some of your own film funning. See if you can mock the
film. See if you can work counter to the director’s intentions. See if
you can poke fun at it using musical references.
2. How easy or difficult was this? What was the effect? Would an audi-
ence enjoy it scored this way? What would be gained or lost?
3. Score the sequence without film funning. Does the film seem as
silly? Is the film any more or less entertaining? Are there places
where film funning is appropriate? Would different audiences
respond differently?
Apparatus theory
The concept of apparatus theory is that film is a construct of the apparatus
of filmmaking: all its machinery and machinations. Film music appears within
Consider your film 47
that apparatus, not as an external discourse (another argument against film
funning). Music should complement the camera angles, shots, and edits that
are the building blocks of filmmaking. How a film was shot, edited, and is
ultimately manifested depends upon film’s apparatus: particular equipment
(its capabilities and limitations), organizational structures (their workflow and
production processes), even systems of finance and exhibition (studios, finan-
ciers, investors, and distributors).
Who has access to that apparatus makes film ideological: often capi-
talist, racist, sexist, homophobic, reinforcing a sociopolitical status quo.
Experimental filmmaking may escape some of that, giving us incentive to
seek out experimental silent film, and yet such films still exist within technical
limitations – consider Man with a Movie Camera (1929) by Soviet filmmaker
Dziga Vertov. The film showcases Vertov’s innovations, drawing attention to
the filmmaking apparatus.
As you watch a film in preparation to score it, be aware of the apparatus of
filmmaking, and how that shaped the film: from ideological biases, to casting,
to the height of a crane shot, to the length of a dolly shot, to the number of
extras. Eventually, how you compose and perform your score becomes part
of that apparatus as well.
Watching in silence
To better study a film, resist the temptation to watch it with a restored score
or someone else’s original score. It may ease an initial viewing, but as soon as
possible, watch the film with the sound off. Not because this replicates silent
period viewing – it doesn’t; the silent period was filled with sound effects and
music – but because it focuses attention on visual and narrative components.
Many recorded soundtracks – whether period or contemporary, authentic
or irrelevant – obscure the filmmaker’s vision and details of the story. It’s
important to watch the film without auditory distractions, so that you may
notice everything onscreen. Music emphasizes certain elements and neglects
others – it may draw your attention to a particular character, but distract you
from something else: another character’s emotion, the scene’s location, or
even something happening in the background. You must notice everything, so
that you can make your own choices.
Many contemporary scores – even among those accompanying high-end
restorations offered on Blu-Ray – tend to bulldoze right through a film, omit-
ting important sound cues implied by the picture. These can include back-
ground sounds, offscreen sounds, environmental sounds, any number of
sounds that might not be as glamorous as a sweeping melody, but that are
important for storytelling. As discussed below, you can have both: a sweeping
melody and sounds that bring out these narrative details; these diegetic sounds
can be imitated or signaled by music. Watching the film in silence will help
you be aware of places where attention to background and offscreen events
can help the storytelling.
Watching in silence encourages you to develop your own ideas. There are
many opportunities and choices to be made: do you hit this character or that
character? Do you play a scene with a certain pace or emotion? Do you lead or
follow the action? Watching in silence helps you resist the temptation, know-
ingly or unwittingly, to duplicate approaches in existing scores, approaches
that are often not the best anyway!
Repetitive viewing
Noticing everything requires repetitive viewing. At first viewing, many sup-
porting characters may seem indistinguishable, even more so if print quality is
50 Consider your film
poor. Locations may seem ambiguous; props may seem vague or unimportant.
The goal of repetitive viewing is to notice everything onscreen, to understand
why things were chosen for inclusion, and to know what they mean.
Subplots
Repetitive viewing brings out subplots (consider the old village couple in
Sunrise) and the motivation of supporting roles. Knowing subplots and how
minor characters support the story allows a composer to make wise decisions
about opportunities for musical emphasis. This knowledge solidifies a formal-
ist reading of the film that is highly beneficial for a composer.
The story of Knock in Nosferatu is a subplot that adds depth (and comedy)
to the film. Knock sends young Hutter off on a fool’s errand but meets his
own demise in madness. Knock adds mystery to the story: how was he con-
nected with Orlock? How does he understand Orlock’s bizarre coded mes-
sage? Recognizing Knock as a character with his own storyline (rather than
as just an ancillary supporting character) suggests musical opportunities and
interpretations.
Character identities
Repetitive viewing helps you better identify supporting and minor characters.
With no audible voices (and inconsistent print quality), filmmakers used a
variety of techniques to hammer home character identities. Eventually, you
will notice how characters are differentiated through clothing (minor char-
acters may never change outfits); hairstyles, facial hair, makeup, and eye-
brows; recurring props; or nervous tics (the pirate always stroking his beard
in The Black Pirate). Differentiating characters will help you understand a
film better, whether or not you give each character a unique theme or musical
characterization.
Character arcs
Notice characters who have discernable character arcs. Major characters usu-
ally learn something or develop in some way over the course of the film.
Minor characters can have arcs, too.
In Nosferatu, distinguishing Professor Bulwer, Dr. Sievers, and Harding
can require multiple viewings; to the casual viewer, they are all just male sup-
porting characters who help push the story forward. Sievers and Harding are
not all that interesting, in and of themselves. Professor Bulwer, however, is
more interesting because he’s in three pivotal scenes.
At the beginning of Nosferatu, Bulwer’s jovial relationship with Hutter
is established. Midway through the film, Bulwer lectures his students about
Consider your film 51
microbes, providing a kind of allegory (or scientific explanation) for the
vampire. At the end of Nosferatu, Hutter chases after Bulwer for help; in the
final scene, Bulwer comes to a realization about what has really happened in
Wisborg. In fact, Bulwer seems to bookend the film, and intertitle cards sug-
gest that the whole story is recounted from his point of view.
Bulwer is a minor role, but even bit characters who show some develop-
ment are more interesting than others who are dramatically static. Bulwer goes
from happy innocent to downcast, knowledgeable survivor. Furthermore, he
seems to represent truth and knowledge acquired through tragedy. While it’s
not clear he is the narrator, all signs point there.
Locations
Repetitive viewing helps you differentiate locations and the meaning behind
those locations. The schooner Empusa in Nosferatu is a ship, that’s clear.
Additionally, there is a bifurcation of above deck and below deck. Above
deck is open air and represents the known, rational world; below deck is asso-
ciated with death and mystery. The moment where Orlock ventures above
deck is an important transition in his power and menace.
In Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, you should understand how Dr. Jekyll’s
house, laboratory, and clinic are physically connected, the layout of the physi-
cal space within the film world. This becomes important to various entrances
and exits, to follow various comings and goings.
In The Mark of Zorro, you should understand how Don Diego’s house is laid
out; this becomes important in the final act, where a secret passage is left open
and exposed. In Nosferatu, you should be able to distinguish between Hutter’s
house and Harding’s house; this will help you better follow Ellen’s storyline.
Note that mastering these details may not be necessary for an audience
casually watching a film. But for you as a composer, through repetitive view-
ing, you will better understand the story by grasping all the locations. This can
ultimately help the audience if it comes across in your music because you can
set things up for them and set the right tone.
Background sounds
We tend to focus on what happens in the foreground: a conversation between
main characters, a fight, a chase, or a conflict; but often there are several
things going on at once, or there are implied sounds of the location, weather,
or other background activity.
Adding sounds to match these backgrounds can make your score more
rich and vivid. If you have multiple players, you can spin one off to cre-
ate these sounds: while one player or players handle a theme or track fore-
ground characters, another player might track something in the background.
52 Consider your film
Backgrounds can be opportunities for musical sounds, noises, or extended
techniques.
Bars and inns are frequent locations in silent films; they appear in Nosferatu
and The Phantom Carriage. Adding sounds of bottles, cups and saucers, or
nearby conversations keeps the environment rich and realistic. You can use
percussion, key clacks on wind instruments, or even actual murmuring from
musicians. The goal is to make the location come alive for the audience.
In big scenes with a large cast, there may be major characters in the fore-
ground, and others in the background. In busy scenes in opera and theatrical
productions, directors may give supernumeraries little background dramas to
concern themselves with. If there is a scene filled with villagers, pairs of vil-
lagers are given things to distract themselves with, arguments to have, and so
on. The audience won’t be privy to these little dramas, but it makes the scene
come alive. Likewise, music can have the same effect following background
dramas and situations.
In Nosferatu, villagers in the inn are shocked that Hutter wants to go to
Orlock’s castle – at night no less! While the main drama is between Hutter
and the innkeeper, there are other characters in the scene. Their reactions and
hubbub, and the abrupt halt to their hubbub, are important and can be tracked
musically.
The Black Pirate features large, chaotic fight scenes. Douglas Fairbanks
is front and center, but there are plenty of his crew and their enemies sword
fighting. To make these fights denser, you can have players track specific
pirates. You’ll still get the musical chaos you want, but it will be more enjoy-
able for players to play and add realism to the fight.
Crowds can be important parts of a story. An angry mob chases Knock
in Nosferatu. Knock is the foreground character, but the scene benefits from
the crowd sounding alive. There are moments during the chase when Knock
outruns the crowd, and we just see Knock. Do we hear the sound of the angry
mob in the distance? Do we hear them offscreen? Do we keep the sound of the
crowd alive during the entire sequence?
Agitated countryfolk, their lanterns casting flickering shadows, rush to the
docks in Sunrise; their commotion wakes up the sleeping City Woman. Do we
hear the crowd outside her room before she wakes up?
In these and other cases, background sounds have narrative importance,
and can provide inspiration for composing an effective musical score.
Environmental sounds
Filling in environmental sounds makes an original score richer and thicker.
Environmental sounds can be sounds of nature, but also sounds of street
traffic (Sunrise), the hubbub of a crowd (Nosferatu), mechanical sounds
(Metropolis), or anything that fills out the environmental setting of a film.
Consider your film 53
These sounds can be created subtly, and can employ creative and extended
techniques.
Ellen is deep in thought on a desolate beach in Nosferatu. What does it
sound like? Is there wind, or surf? Colored noise or various blown textures
on wind instruments work well for these sounds. Sometimes a recorder or
alto flute works better than a standard flute in C. Sometimes a clarinet or
saxophone mouthpiece works well on its own. On string instruments, bowing
sul ponticello (near the bridge) or playing harmonics can yield nice effects.
Portamento harmonics played sul ponticello can give an effect sounding like
the crying of seagulls.
Seafaring ships ply the open sea in The Black Pirate and Nosferatu. Do
the ships groan and creak? Creak tone (bowing slow and heavy on the string)
on double bass is good for this, and for implying the sounds of deep waves,
raising and lowering the bow of the ship.
Even if you’re composing a relatively straightforward tonal score, envi-
ronmental sounds offer you the opportunity to expand your palette with con-
temporary effects and extended techniques. This can help push your score into
a more exciting contemporary musical space.
Offscreen sounds
Watching a film with the sound off, you will discover instances where characters
react to offscreen sound even before you see its diegetic source. While this is
common in sound film, many people don’t realize it happens in silent film, too!
These instances are important to notice because they provide a visual cue
that you have an opportunity to track offscreen sound. The benefit of tracking
54 Consider your film
offscreen sound is that the movie comes to life and makes more logical sense.
Here are some examples of implied or obvious offscreen sounds.
In Nosferatu, Orlock and Hutter, in their first meeting in Orlock’s castle,
react to the clock striking midnight, before the picture cuts to the clock (ca.
00:24:30). Ideally, you could add a chiming sound that starts just before their
reaction shots, so that we hear the chime, see their reactions, and then see the
clock. We would say this chime sound prelaps the shot of the clock.
A viewer might miss this moment when watching a DVD or Blu-Ray with
a restored or original score where prelapped chimes are left out (simply coin-
ciding with the shot of the clock), or the chimes are not hit at all. Prelapping
the shot of the clock with chimes is beneficial: the reaction shots make more
sense, and the viewing experience is more logical.
In Sunrise, there’s a moment where The Man decides not to kill his Wife,
and throws up his arms, covering his face in shame or revulsion (ca. 00:31:00).
He begins rowing their rowboat furiously, and we see a long shot of the village
church. There is an opportunity here to add distant church bells ringing just
before he throws his arms up; this would imply a logical reason for his sudden
change of heart. If the score fails to emphasize that we see a church from his
point of view, the scene still works but makes less sense. Having a church bell
prelap his decision not to kill his Wife makes the scene more logical.
In Sunrise, lantern light splashes around the City Woman’s room, suggest-
ing offscreen commotion, which wakes her (ca. 01:20:25). We see the dancing
lantern light before we see the agitated villagers; it would make sense to have
sound or music similarly track the offscreen commotion.
Offscreen sounds are not just prelaps, but moments where we might keep
a plot point alive, prolonging its presence through sound or music. Offscreen
sound can accentuate what characters are hearing. There is a sequence with a
runaway piglet in Sunrise (ca. 01:00:50); even when the pig is not onscreen,
we might still hear it squealing. In Sunrise, a runaway dog breaks from its
chain (ca. 00:25:40); we might still hear it yapping even offscreen.
Offscreen sounds provide us with choices, decisions, and opportunities.
We should watch a film enough to spot occasions where offscreen sounds or
music might be part of our score.
Figure 2.1 Draft cue list for The Mark of Zorro. © 2016 Jack Curtis Dubowsky.
A cue list can form the foundation for an ensuing musical score. Notice
the pencil annotations in Figure 2.1. Already elements of the score are being
sketched: percussion hits, pizzicato sneaks, and mickey-mousing (“MM”) dia-
logue between characters. (These techniques are discussed further in Chapters
3 and 4.) This cue list shows how the scoring process begins by studying the
film, noting cinematic and narrative events. When those are laid upon the
page, you have a formula that can structure your score. The cue list (and your
score) can evolve as needed. The more carefully you study and know your
film, the better your score will be.
Figure 2.2 shows the corresponding section of The Mark of Zorro from the
finished cue book. (Themes and cue book notation is discussed in Chapter 4.)
Cues have been revised and abbreviated; each lane refers to an instrument;
the boxes show when and what they play. The cue list was a preliminary step
toward this finished score.
You may notice the “Fade to: BLACK” that separates two scenes. While
the music seems to end and begin anew with the second scene, this isn’t
Consider your film 57
Figure 2.2 C
ue book for The Mark of Zorro live score © 2017 Jack Curtis Dubowsky
/ De Stijl Music.
always the best approach. The mickey-mousing could extend over the black,
or the pizzicato sneaks could prelap the new scene. Or, you could have both,
and they could overlap. Any of these approaches can be cued by a conductor
in performance, but a desired option could be written right into the cue book.
Scene divisions
It might feel natural to have music start and end with each scene (or even
each reel – a method harkening to apparatus theory). This, however, is a
poor and uninteresting approach, especially if overused. Having music track
scenes start-to-finish was seen as artless and lazy even during the Nickelodeon
period. In 1911, “Our Music Page” in The Moving Picture News bemoaned,
58 Consider your film
The average musician is under the impression that it is necessary for them
to change the music with each scene as it occurs in the picture – but this
idea is entirely wrong; it would do more harm than good […] Good judg-
ment must be used in dividing the picture so as to pick out the important
situations and to select the main theme of the subject to be played for –
you must make it a point to try and play the pictures just as smooth as you
can, and try and avoid that undesirable break, that so often is heard, and
that is entirely uncalled for. [Good music] cannot be produced by trying
to follow each and every scene and insert music to fit the individual scene
as it appears.10
Music divisions should not necessarily match scene divisions; this is the
approach of an “average musician.” The film should be spotted to “pick
out the important situations,” and to prioritize those moments. Transitions
should be planned to avoid the “undesirable break” and to keep the music
“smooth” while it supports the film. Music can serve to bridge transitions
and scene changes, making a film more fluid. Music can lead us into and out
of scenes, and music can itself break or transition at appropriate moments
mid-scene.
1. Create a cue list: a sequential list of shots and onscreen action. Use
very short descriptions.
How much detail do you want or need in this list? Does it give you
some spotting ideas? Can you use it as the basis for musical spotting
notes?
Choose a silent short, or one to two reels of a feature silent film, about
10–20 minutes.
1. Write down some spotting notes, where you’d want music, and
what music would do.
2. Write down a second set of spotting notes, imagining different
approaches.
3. Write some simple music, a rough draft, to test your spotting notes.
See how well each approach works.
4. How does creating spotting notes in advance shape your
composition?
Consider your film 59
Tentpoles: important sequences
These “important situations,” sometimes called “tentpole scenes,”11 are
moments critical to the film; they should be handled delicately. Tentpoles
aren’t unique to silent film, and they aren’t necessarily big action scenes.
Narratively, tentpoles can be major turning points that help define the story.
Sunrise has two mirrored, pivotal moments: first, from The Wife, second,
from The Man. The Wife, briefly left alone in a little rowboat, realizes a dan-
gerous character flaw in her husband (ca. 00:27:20). Without dialogue (or
intertitles), actor Janet Gaynor slowly reveals her dark realization; it directly
causes her flight to The City. Her epiphany in the rowboat is an opportunity
for music to help show her thoughts – although you don’t want to overplay the
scene and ruin its delicacy.12
Later, The Man cries for forgiveness in the city cathedral (ca. 00:42:00).
His repentance directly causes a transformation in their relationship that is
exploited in the ensuing act. The film depends on these tentpole scenes to
succeed, or none of the ensuing action makes any sense. The film has other
pivotal moments as well, but these hold up the film in their temporal vicinity.
One approach to composing a film score is to identify and score tentpole
scenes first; this can solidify your approach to the whole film. If the tentpoles
are working, the rest becomes easier to fill in.
It makes sense to draw up a budget for a live score event. Ticket sales are not
easy to predict in advance. You may, however, be okay with operating at a
loss, for the experience, or to establish your name, or build your reputation.
Drawing up a budget will help you ascertain how much money you can afford
to spend on your players: how many musicians you can afford to hire, how
much you can afford to pay them each, and how many “services”16 or rehears-
als you can afford. The choice of players is discussed in the next chapter,
“Consider your score.”
Notes
1 Saunders, Alfred H., Editor. (1911). “Our Music Column.” The Moving Picture
News. Vol. IV, No. 25. June 24, 1911. p. 9. (New York: The Cinematograph
Publishing Company).
2 Christie, Ian. (2000). “Formalism and Neo-Formalism” in Film Studies: Critical
Approaches. Edited by John Hill and Pamela Church Gibson. (New York: Oxford
University Press). p. 56.
3 Ibid., p. 56.
4 Ibid., pp. 57–8.
5 For additional discussion see Goldmark, Daniel. (2005). Tunes for ‘Toons.
(Berkeley, CA: University of California Press). pp. 15–16.
6 Saunders, Alfred H., Editor. (1911). “Our Music Column.” The Moving Picture
News. Vol. IV, No. 25. June 24, 1911. p. 9. (New York: The Cinematograph
Publishing Company).
7 “There is one thing that the musician must at all times strive to do, that is, get into
the spirit of the picture, allow yourself as much as possible to become enveloped in
the atmosphere that you think the producer was trying to accomplish, bring out each
and every point as clear and distinct as possible. If the picture is a comedy, help it
along and thus help carry out the idea the producer had in mind. A drama may have
both serious and comic elements in its make-up; very often in a dramatic picture it
is possible to introduce a laugh where none was intended, and this you must be very
careful to avoid at all times as it is very liable to interfere with a serious or impor-
tant scene, for there is always some ass in the average audience who will laugh at
anything, at any time.” Saunders, Alfred H., Editor. (1911). “Our Music Column.”
The Moving Picture News. Vo. IV, No. 46. November 18, 1911. p. 36. (New York:
The Cinematograph Publishing Company).
62 Consider your film
8 “Gradually, musical cliches [sic], tags, and popular songs became unfashionable.
With the advent of the feature-length photoplay, the picture palace and more refined
musical accompaniments, cliches [sic] and ‘old favorites’ (like sound effects) were
relegated to serving comedy where ‘funning the film’ was deemed acceptable.”
Berg, Charles Merrell. (1973). An Investigation of the Motives for and Realization
of Music to Accompany the American Silent Film, 1896–1927. p. 199 (Dissertation).
University of Iowa.
9 As of this writing, some silent period cue sheets can be found online at the Silent Film
Sound & Music Archive, https://www.sfsma.org/ARK/22915/category/cue-sheets/
10 Saunders, Alfred H., Editor. (1911). “Our Music Page.” The Moving Picture News.
Vol. IV, Np. 29. July 22, 1911. p. 9. (New York: The Cinematograph Publishing
Company).
11 Dubowsky, Jack C. (2011). “The Evolving ‘Temp Score’ in Animation” in Music,
Sound, and the Moving Image. Vol. 5, Issue 1. Spring 2011. p. 6. (Liverpool:
Liverpool University Press).
12 In contrast, I would argue that the chase that follows The Wife’s realization (ca.
00:32:10) is a good example of an action sequence that is not a tentpole, being a bit
of a throwaway sequence that serves primarily to transport the couple into The City.
13 See https://www.kinolorberedu.com for example.
14 Crow, Logan. (2022). Executive Director and Founder, The Frida Cinema, Santa
Ana, California. Email to author, June 20, 2022.
15 Van Dijs, Jan. (2022). Board Chair, Art Theater of Long Beach. Email to author,
June 11, 2022.
16 “Services” refers to both rehearsals and performances; basically, anytime a musi-
cian has to show up. Many professional musicians may not care to distinguish
between a rehearsal and a performance, it’s their time they are selling, so the num-
ber of services includes all rehearsals and performances.
Bibliography
Berg, Charles Merrell. (1973). An Investigation of the Motives of and Realization
of Music to Accompany the American Silent Film, 1896-1927 (Dissertation).
(University of Iowa), p. 199.
Christie, Ian. (2000). “Formalism and Neo-Formalism.” In Film Studies: Critical
Approaches. Edited by Hill, John and Gibson, Pamela Church (New York: Oxford
University Press).
Goldmark, Daniel. (2005). Tunes For ‘Toons (Berkeley: University of California
Press), pp. 15–16.
Saunders, Alfred H., Editor. (1911, June 24). “Our Music Column.” The Moving Picture
News, Vol. IV, No. 25 (New York: The Cinematograph Publishing Company), p. 9.
Saunders, Alfred H., Editor. (1911, November 18). “Our Music Column.” The Moving
Picture News, Vol. IV, No. 46 (New York: The Cinematograph Publishing
Company), p. 36.
3 Consider your score
This chapter helps composers look ahead and make thoughtful decisions in
planning a score. We look at musical concerns including planning themes,
choice of ensemble, as well as aesthetic and compositional choices. This
chapter helps composers consider musical opportunities presented in silent
film, in particular how music can be placed, and how music can work with
common cinematic tropes. While contemporary sound films have similar (or
identical) concerns, silent films broaden our possibilities musically, even as
they demand special care to remain faithful to a film dramatically, whose
writer, director, and creative team are long gone.
DOI: 10.4324/9781003254447-3
64 Consider your score
Planning musical themes and tying them to story or cinematic elements
help a composer sketch an overview of the score. Naming these themes and
plotting their use in the film – before even composing them – lends organiza-
tion and a solid framework to the score and the composition process.
1. Without composing any music, plan themes you’d want to have for
the film. How many would there be? What would they represent?
What would you call them? How often would they occur? How
could they develop? Would they lend themselves to any particular
variations?
2. Name these themes.
Figure 3.1 S
hort score sketch from Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, © 2018 Jack Curtis
Dubowsky / De Stijl Music.
1. Using one (or more) of the named themes from the previous exer-
cise, compose some music without running the film.
2. Using the film chosen in the earlier exercise, run the film and
improvise to it freely, keeping in mind the themes you thought to
develop.
66 Consider your score
Choice of ensemble
In artistic terms, choice of ensemble involves what instruments might best
communicate your score. For The Mark of Zorro, guitar, mandolin, or bandur-
ria might evoke colonial Spanish California. Action adventures might benefit
from percussion.
Sometimes instruments appear onscreen, suggesting their inclusion. A gui-
tar appears in The Phantom Carriage; a piano appears in Dr. Jekyll and Mr.
Hyde. Bassoons and a shofar appear onscreen in The Golem. A dance band,
brass instruments, and a bell carillon appear in Sunrise. Being able to include
the sounds of onscreen instruments in your score helps tie it to the film.
In practical terms, to choose the forces of an ensemble, one must know
the budget; venue size; number or specialties of players demanded (do play-
ers double?); and the number of rehearsals needed or possible. A large venue
may require more players (or even amplification) to fill the room with sound;
a small house may only have physical space for a handful of players at most.
Budgetary restrictions will limit your choice of players, of course; this is an
obvious caveat to the information that follows.
Solo piano
Solo piano’s long tradition of silent film accompaniment dates back to the
Lumière brothers’ public demonstrations and to storefront nickelodeons, well
before the opulent movie palaces of the 1920s were built. These early pianists
laid a groundwork of harmonic and rhythmic clichés pulled from popular song
and light opera.
The piano, of course, is capable of much more than this preliminary
vocabulary of clichés. By 1933, Kurt London, an inceptive critic and histo-
rian of film music, bemoaned the “beginning of the pianist period” in early
cinema:
Theater organ
Theater organ (or cinema organ) has its own storied history; it developed from
church and cathedral organs, with an eye towards dramatically expanding the
70 Consider your score
sound palette available for film accompaniment, even including percussion
instruments.5 The instrument became associated with cinema, widely installed
in opulent movie palaces in the 1920s.
Organ performance is a specialized area; organs and keyboards may be
playable by a pianist, but they have their own idiosyncrasies and performance
techniques. Organs may have a pedal board, volume swell pedals, intricate
stops and settings, and so on.
A notable characteristic of the organ is its ability to sustain. Unlike a
piano, whose notes decay immediately after being struck, the organ better
imitates acoustic instruments and legato passages. Like the piano, the organ
has its own set of clichés, and has the same issue for a single player to remain
attentive and focused throughout a feature-length performance.
A contemporary organist might consider changing stops or twiddling
knobs while playing a sound, as opposed to just changing presets. The ability
for low tones to vibrate the whole theater can be exploited for its own effect,
creating a kind of Sensurround. The use of atonality will further pull the organ
away from its existing clichés. I advocate for the organist to expand the way
the instrument is used, rather than just fulfilling audience expectations.
Duet
Performing a live score as a duet starts to add possibilities as well as relief dur-
ing a long film, where two players can trade off duties. Having multi-instrumen-
talists is a benefit, with the creation of a variety of sounds possible. While some
duets, like piano and percussion, might imply a straightforward approach, you
can do interesting things with an unusual duet. A bassoon and a banjo might
challenge you to explore extended techniques or unusual approaches. There is
really no combination that would not work; there are challenges to any duet,
and there are benefits to choosing contrasting instruments.
Small ensemble
Three to four players can be considered a small ensemble for the purposes
of live score to silent film. Alloy Orchestra was just three players, and built
a strong national reputation. It’s easier to tour, and to take shows to distant
venues, with a small ensemble than with a large one.
Small ensembles have other benefits: you don’t need a conductor; musi-
cians can play off each other with ease; players can rest while another takes a
scene; you have a variety of different possible combinations. Arranging music
for small ensemble, you can start to think in terms of solos, duets, and tuttis.
72 Consider your score
With three to four players, you open up a broader palette of sounds and the
ability to track multiple things: one player might play a theme; one or two
players might mickey-mouse or improvise onscreen characters; one player
might handle environmental sounds or ambience. Scores begin to offer more
depth and complexity with just three to four players.
Midsize ensemble
Five to eight players can be considered a midsize ensemble. With this number
of players, it can help to add a conductor, or have a player who can conduct
entrances and give tempos. Possible depth and complexity are increased even
more over a small ensemble. Tuttis become larger. You can fill larger venues
with sound. There is less worry about players being exhausted during a long
performance; there are still many opportunities for solos, improvisations, and
places for individual players to shine. You can dedicate a single instrument to a
character: a leading lady is routinely a flute, perhaps, or the villain always rep-
resented by the double bass. Choices do not need to be this predictable or cliché;
you could do the opposite or something unexpected, keeping it consistent so the
characterizations are understood. Beth Custer’s score for Chemi Bebia (1929)
is scored for seven instruments (Figure 3.2). Note the use of improvisation, with
instructions simply entered as text in the bass clarinet and trumpet parts.
Figure 3.2 L
ive score for Chemi Bebia (My Grandmother) dir. by Kote Mikaberidze
(1929), © Beth Custer 2005. Used by permission.
Consider your score 73
Orchestra
More than eight players situated before the screen becomes perceived as
an orchestra by most audiences. Larger ensembles are best suited for larger
venues that offer adequate space. You may need to visit venues beforehand
to scope out where everyone will go. Large groups can feel unwieldy in
rehearsal; large groups can respond more slowly to a conductor, unless play-
ers have significant orchestra experience.
Using an orchestra or large ensemble may suggest more conservative
approaches, such as a fully notated score. This can reduce chaos, accidents,
unpredictability, the number of rehearsals, and so on. If a score is fully
notated, hired players can come in and play through it – whereas scores incor-
porating improvisation, mickey-mousing, and other ad lib techniques can
require more rehearsals, coaching, even specialized players with expertise in
free improvisation.
Orchestras and large ensembles can still employ approaches that are avant-
garde, less reliant on traditional notation, or that eschew traditional notation
altogether, such as conduction. Butch Morris (1947–2013) developed conduc-
tion as a technique to lead ensembles using a vocabulary of hand, body, and
baton gestures. Others in New York’s downtown scene, like John Zorn, devel-
oped their own similar techniques. When players understand the conductor’s
signals, they know when to play and can follow the gestures. Music can be
made spontaneously or planned by the conductor in advance.
You might try having a large ensemble without a conductor; in this
instance, you might divide the ensemble into sections, each with its own dra-
matic purpose, where section leaders synchronize tempos and entrances. The
more you break down a large ensemble, you may be looking at more chaos or
more rehearsal time. This could be a fun experiment for a large class, but if
your goal is truly to give players more artistic freedom and independence, a
smaller ensemble is likely the way to go.
With a large ensemble, we should think about the layout of players in
rehearsal and performance, in particular sight lines and proximity to other
performers. Does the player watch the screen or a conductor? Do they need
to see both? Players do not need to be seated in a traditional orchestral lay-
out; there are better ways of seating a large ensemble for silent film. Players
who mickey-mouse important roles in scenes together might sit together, so
they can dialogue and not step on each other’s parts (notice the “improvised
duo” specified in Figure 3.2). High instruments might be grouped together for
better tuning and harmonization; it is difficult or impossible to retune during
a long performance. A rhythm section might be grouped together, to help
keep it tight; who this section includes depends on how you use different
instruments.
If the conductor faces the screen and the ensemble faces the conductor
– unless the group is angled sideways or players can turn around – players
74 Consider your score
cannot see the screen and will therefore need to take all their cues from the
conductor; this approach nearly requires a fully notated score and perhaps
even a click track.
This setup can be reversed: players can face the screen, facilitating mickey-
mousing and tight synchronization, with the conductor facing the ensemble.
The conductor may use a tablet to see the screen behind them, or a video
feed from the projection booth. Sightlines, visibility, and staging are further
discussed in Chapter 4.
Depending upon the depth of the pit, height of the screen, and the pitch of
auditorium seating, some instruments might block the screen and, if so, can be
kept to one side; these instruments might include double bass and percussion.
(Sometimes, self-conscious players can believe they are “in the way,” when it
is a really a non-issue from the point of view of the audience.) You may also
need to be mindful of light splash on the screen from poorly positioned stand
lights from raised instruments.
1. Score the scene, having music lead or “tip off” the audience.
2. Score the scene, having music tightly timed, like a jump scare.
3. Score the scene, having the music lag, aiming to allow the music to
react in tandem with an audience’s reaction.
4. Compare these approaches, and how well they work for your par-
ticular chosen scene. Would the results be different for a different
scene? Why?
1. Find places where you can cushion the score to help with
synchronization.
2. Find an area where music can start anywhere and still work.
3. Find an area where music can finish anywhere and still work.
If you have a musical or dramatic climax within the start and finish,
how tightly can you place it?
Choose a silent feature with a central character who develops over
the course of the film. Can you write a theme that would grow or
develop over the course of the film to match that? Would it begin with
a fragment? How would it grow or change?
Environmental effects
While composers enjoy playing emotion and concocting powerful, memora-
ble movie themes, a score is denser and richer when composers exploit other
opportunities as well. Some players can handle environmental effects even
while others simultaneously play themes or emotions. These effects give the
score subtlety and dimensionality.
Sounds of the sea, air, wind, heat, cold, running water, splashes, steam, and
so on can be handled musically. Woodwinds offer effects like colored noise
and third octave overtones. Buzzing reeds and mouthpieces can be insects
78 Consider your score
and animal creatures. Strings have creak tone (sub-harmonics), harmonics,
col legno, jeté, sul ponticello and other effects that make sounds ranging from
a whisper to a convincing door knock. These effects are discussed in detail
in orchestration books like Adler’s The Study of Orchestration, Blatter’s
Instrumentation and Orchestration, Solomon’s How to Write for Percussion,
and others.
Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans, with obvious openings for emotional
scoring, offers other opportunities for musical interpretation: the storm, the
streetcar, the runaway pig, shouting crowds, honking horns, a bicycle bell in
city traffic. These are all story elements. If these important bits of story are
brought forward musically, the film becomes much more alive.
Nosferatu, likewise, has important environmental elements: buzz-
ing mosquitos, the steep Carpathian Mountains, the windy beach, rolling
ocean waves, the derelict house, the cold castle. Music can emphasize
these qualities, even as a theme or melody is played by other instruments
simultaneously.
Emotional readings
Focusing on environmental effects helps a composer avoid overplaying emo-
tion. Silent films imply strong emotions to contemporary audiences, but this
does not always need amplification. Avoid milking every moment. By exer-
cising restraint, a contemporary score can make a silent film more genuine,
resonant, and less corny.
As discussed in Chapter 1, silent film acting tends to telegraph emotion
through established gestures that are clear – if you understand the gestures.
If gestures are subtle or likely to be misunderstood, they may benefit from
emotional music. If the gestures are unambiguous, pedaling emotional music
too hard may just pile it on unnecessarily.
In Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Millie, Utterson, Lanyon, and their associates
try to get a read on what’s going on with Dr. Jekyll. Millie vacillates between
concern, disappointment, thoughtfulness: she has to negotiate two marriage
Consider your score 79
proposals, balancing her father’s wishes, her own heart, and what seems
sensible. As a result, there are several scenes that traffic in the ambiguities
and complexities of the moment (ca. 00:07:00; ca. 00:12:50; ca. 00:23:40;
00:38:00). If you write powerful emotional music for such delicate scenes,
you may do the film a disservice by forcing a particular interpretation.
A composer should study a film to gauge emotional readings, whether
they need help, and whether they are monochromatic or complex. A character
may appear sad, but they may also be expressing concern or contemplation.
Imagining a character’s interior monologue, as discussed in Chapter 1, helps a
composer consider more complex ways of playing a scene, rather than simply
scoring abject sadness. Music can reflect the emotional depth and complexity
of a film.
Find a dialogue scene in a silent film, especially one where the situation
or gestures are a bit subtle or ambiguous.
Which approach works best? Can you combine the approaches? Did
any of the approaches change the perceptible meaning of the scene or
the implications of the dialogue?
Comedy
Like emotional moments discussed above, comedy risks being musically
overplayed. When watching a film, consider: what are the jokes? What is
supposed to be funny? Ideally, the audience should laugh at intended jokes,
rather than laughing at the film itself. You want to bring the audience into the
world of the film, not take them out of it. (You may recall how film funning,
discussed in Chapter 2, can take an audience out of the film, an approach this
book actively discourages.)
When you have identified light or comedic moments, consider how much
help they need. Will they work better without exaggerating goofiness or min-
ing clichés? (Note this question persists today in scoring comedy!)
Another pitfall is to ignore comedy altogether, to treat an entire silent film
as a museum piece with no sense of humor. Weighty, canonical films do have
moments that serve as comedic reprieves. Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans
has a number of funny vignettes: the escaped pig, the drunk waiter, the photo
shop escapade. You can hit these comedic moments and still treat the film
with respect. If you ignore comedic moments, a film can feel too ponderous or
unintentionally pretentious.
Moments with comedic potential add complexity to a film. In a tense café
scene in Sunrise, the Man feebly attempts to patch things up, bringing his
distraught Wife a plate of cakes (ca. 00:37:10). But the plate of cakes is far
too big; it doesn’t make sense from a practical standpoint. The Man is a bit
of a hayseed, not the sharpest tack in the box, and the number of cakes seems
like overcompensation. There is a desperate magnanimity to the gesture, as if
Consider your score 81
the cakes were atonement for attempted murder. But any laughs are quickly
deflated as the Wife starts to cry in the café, and they have to leave.
The character of Knock in Nosferatu provides some comic relief. He over-
acts his joy at sending Hutter on a fool’s errand (ca. 00:08:00), and ends up
eating flies in jail (ca. 00:45:50). At times sadistic, avaricious, or having lost
his mind (bringing up ethical issues of how to play mental illness), Knock
provides moments that can be played for comedy – or not. How you navigate
Knock is an example of how scoring comedy deserves careful consideration.
Chases
A basic cinematic trope, the chase is typically handled musically with some
form of scherzo. Chases are usually easy to spot and may coincide with an
accelerated visual pace or picture cuts. Chases may provide opportunities for
increased improvisation, variation of established themes, conduction, or any
combination of these.
Consider the purposes of the chase: is it a gratuitous action sequence?
Does it tell us something about the characters? In Sunrise, The Wife runs from
The Man, letting us know that she has figured out that he is dangerous (ca.
00:32:00). The Man gives chase, but we have yet to ascertain fully his inten-
tions or what is unfolding. Later in the film, the Man chases the runaway pig,
but this is played for comedy and ersatz country heroism.
You don’t need to score a chase with a scherzo; The Wife’s flight from
The Man could be played with some form of sadness; it could be a twisted
variation of a theme for The Man; it could be music that reflects the woodsy
environment and remains detached from the chase itself. In all cases, you
might consider the purpose of the chase within the film, and how your music
can reinforce that purpose.
1. Calculate timings for the ending. How long is the final scene? How
long is the concluding shot or moment? How long does it hold until
the “The End” card appears?
2. Plan music for the ending moment; try working this out in reverse.
At what point do you want the music to end? At what point would
you need the final chord or fermata to begin? What screen action
would indicate a good sync point for a final phrase? What point
would be a safe place for a concluding theme to start?
3. Try playing along and see how comfortable these timings work out.
Is it easy or tricky? If it’s too tricky to get right every time, what
would make it easier?
Notes
1 Altman, Rick. (2004). Silent Film Sound. (New York: Columbia University Press).
pp. 85–7.
2 London, Kurt. Translated by Eric S. Bensinger. (1936). Film Music: A Summary
of the Characteristic Features of Its History, Aesthetics, Technique; and Possible
Developments. (London: Faber & Faber Ltd.). p. 40.
Consider your score 83
3 Rapée, Ernö. (1924). Motion Picture Moods for Pianists and Organists. (New
York: G. Schirmer, Inc.).
4 See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WcDDmwVdSlw
5 Altman, Rick. (2004). Silent Film Sound. (New York: Columbia University Press).
pp. 330–7.
6 See https://www.edisonstudio.it/en/home-en/
7 A good resource for these techniques is Roads, Curtis. (2023). The Computer Music
Tutorial, Second Edition. (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press).
8 See https://www.lookmumnocomputer.com
9 See Rapée, Ernö. (1924). Motion Picture Moods For Pianists and Organists. (New
York: G. Schirmer, Inc.). See also Erdmann, Hans, Becce, Giuseppe, and Brav,
Ludwig. (1927). Allgemeines Handbuch der Film-Musik. (Berlin-Lichterfelde,
Leipzig: Schlesinger). (2020 reprint: Berlin: Ries & Erler).
10 Many of these are preserved at the Silent Film Sound & Music Archive website
under the Cue Sheets category at www.sfsma.org
11 Music for the Movies: The Hollywood Sound. (1995). Video. Director Joshua
Waletzky. (West Branch, NJ: Kultur Video).
12 Iconic examples include Raymond Scott’s “Powerhouse” often heard in Warner
Brothers cartoons.
Bibliography
Dubowsky, Jack C. (2011). “The Evolving “Temp Score” in Animation.” Music, Sound,
and the Moving Image, Vol. 5, No. 1. Spring (Liverpool: Liverpool University
Press).
Erdmann, Hans, Becce, Giuseppe, and Brav, Ludwig. (1927). Allgemeines Handbuch
der Film-Musik (Berlin-Lichterfelde, Leipzig: Schlesinger) (2020 reprint: Berlin:
Ries & Erler).
Music for the Movies: The Hollywood Sound. (1995). Video. Director Joshua Waletzky
(West Long Branch NJ: Kultur Video).
Rapée, Ernö. (1924). Motion Picture Moods for Pianists and Organists (New York: G.
Schirmer, Inc.).
Saunders, Alfred H., Editor. (1911, July 22). “Our Music Page.” The Moving Picture
News, Vol. IV, No. 29 (New York: The Cinematograph Publishing Company), p. 9.
Shockley, Alan (2018). The Contemporary Piano: A Performer and Composer’s Guide
to Techniques and Resources (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.).
4 Communicate your score
This chapter looks at ways to document and communicate your score to your
players, and ultimately, the audience. We look at musical approaches to scor-
ing, including stylistic options, methods of notation, and conducting concerns.
Avant-garde
Composing for silent film affords us artistic possibilities to shatter audience
preconceptions and clichéd expectations. Writing in 1941, expatriate German-
Austrian composer and intellectual Hanns Eisler asked rhetorically,
DOI: 10.4324/9781003254447-4
Communicate your score 85
Eisler, seeing “new musical material” as “more useful and effective” for film
than “rehashing” known classics, composed music for several documentaries
using a serial 12-tone style he learned studying with Arnold Schoenberg.
Others would push the envelope as well. Helen van Dongen created a full
reel of musique concrète for Louisiana Story (1948), a sound collage of record-
ings made at an oil derrick; today this might be called noise music or indus-
trial music, two genres underused in film music.3 Bebe and Louis Barron, Gil
Mellé, and Wendy Carlos composed atonal electronic music for film. Directors
Stanley Kubrick and William Friedkin placed existing avant-garde classical
music by composers György Ligeti and Krzysztof Penderecki in their films.
As early as 1941, Eisler noticed that audiences accepted and enjoyed
atonal and avant-garde music in film.
Apparently advanced musical material, which average concertgoers may
find indigestible and non-relevant, when applied to films loses something
of this forbidding quality. Even the unaccustomed ear finds complex musi-
cal devices more understandable and effective when accompanied by vis-
ual images.4
This phenomenon is logical: if music works to support the picture, if music
and moving image join together effectively, the net effect overrides personal
tastes and biases. Powerful cinema achieves a sort of idealized Wagnerian
Gesamtkunstwerk through which audiences no longer concern themselves
with details of musical genre, but absorb the entire effect.
Composing and performing music for silent film affords you freedoms and
opportunities to be radically interesting in any number of ways. You are free
from director, studio, or network notes. You don’t need to avoid clashing
with a dialogue track. You can make art. You can make mistakes. You can
try things that push boundaries, and may succeed better than “crumbs picked
from the tables” of established mainstream composers.
Pastiche
It’s possible to use a mix of styles throughout a film. Mixing contrasting
musical styles is called pastiche, a term often applied to the work of John
Corigliano, who composed concert works, the opera The Ghosts of Versailles,
and scores for The Red Violin and Altered States.
86 Communicate your score
Use of pastiche in film benefits from planned, conceptual consistency:
rather than changing musical style at random, pastiche is best used to empha-
size cinematic aspects. One might carefully switch styles based on locations,
characters, or points in time.
In Sunrise, a thematic bifurcation separates city and countryside. The city
is sophisticated, loud, noisy, and filled with temptation. The countryside is
simple and homey. City folk vacation in the country; country folk long to
see the city. Sunrise explores this duality as a major plot device. Could the
city be loud, exciting bebop jazz, while the countryside is pastoral woodwind
chorales?
Metropolis features an aboveground city and belowground city. Could the
aboveground city be represented by a light, airy style, like bubblegum pop,
and the belowground city by a heavier, darker style, like death metal?
Characters may be delineated by contrasting musical styles. Dr. Jekyll
and Mr. Hyde are one man who undergoes a recurring transformation. Could
you give them the same musical theme but radically change its style for each
incarnation?
Movies that shift through time, like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and The
Phantom Carriage, could use different styles to reflect different time periods.
You may come up with other ideas for how to plan consistent use of pas-
tiche. Contrasting musical styles can be tied to various elements of a film;
hypothetically, you could employ any number of styles and connect them to
things like certain special effects, particular cards, or distinctive close-ups.
Find a part of a silent film that has people or objects moving, falling, or
exhibiting some kind of kinetic action.
Structured improvisation
Mickey-mousing, ambiences, and sound effects do not need to be entirely
notated; in many cases, it’s best if they are not notated at all.
A percussionist duplicating hits in a swordfight can perform those better
ad lib than you can notate them. Wind players can create environmental wind
effects freely. A player imitating physical movement or language – pleading,
crying, laughing, arguing, shouting – can improvise those gestures without
complicated notation.
These improvisations are structured improvisation, where the film itself
provides the structure. The idea is to support and synchronize to the film – not
to follow a chord chart (as one might improvise a “solo” in jazz or pop music).
In fact, much structured improvisation for silent film works better when it is
Communicate your score 89
atonal, or ventures outside key areas other musicians might play simultane-
ously (a notated character theme, for instance). This atonality or different pitch
set distinguishes mickey-mousing from its musical surroundings, so it doesn’t
disappear in the mix, or sound like another part of a musical fabric. You want
it to stand out, so the audience takes notice. Structured improvisation follows
its own visual and narrative cues; performing structured improvisation is its
own skillset, and can be refined in rehearsal so it works with the film.
Timing of improvisation is crucial, and relies on players’ willingness to
carefully study the film. Often these gestures need to be dead on to work.
Matching screen action is essential; a player should be momentarily free from
the written score to follow the screen independent of whatever the rest of the
band is playing. Therefore, the use of improvisation leads us to consider nota-
tion techniques, which are discussed later in this chapter.
Find a scene or sequence in a silent film. Try using these onscreen vec-
tors to structure improvisation. Imagine other possibilities.
Motivic improvisation
In composing for silent film, you may come up with strong themes you
really like. The idea behind motivic improvisation – distinct from soloing or
90 Communicate your score
comping over chord changes – is that players freely manipulate thematic and
motivic melodic material as the basis for improvisation, without necessarily
adhering to any chord chart or progression. This makes the manipulation more
free, creative, and developmental, while still pointing to existing composed
themes.
Themes can be broken down into fragments; these might be a phrase, a
bar, or two bars of a longer melody. Distinctive fragments provide good mate-
rial for manipulation. This way, a musician can freely improvise around a
musical idea without wearing out a theme’s welcome. The full realization
of the theme can be held in abeyance until an important moment in the film.
Fragments, motives, and themes can be manipulated through exploring
melodic contour, rhythmic figuration, rhythmic augmentation and diminution,
melodic inversion, reversal, reharmonization, and so on. These techniques are
discussed in many composition texts; my point here is that such manipula-
tion can be done on the fly, freely, in improvisation. Furthermore, these the-
matic fragments can be introduced within the course of other improvisational
techniques.
Structural improvisation can incorporate both gestural improvisation and
melodic improvisation. Imagine a player mickey-mousing Florence Turner’s
outlandish facial gestures in Daisy Doodad’s Dial (1914) using fragments of
a theme, rather than just squawks and slides. You can imagine a chase scene
where a short fragment of a character’s theme is sped up and repeated to
match the pace of the action.
This book encourages approaches that give individual players freedom to
interpret silent film and express their ideas musically. Still, and especially in a
group ensemble, this improvisation often needs to be coached.
Coaching improvisation
If you lead your own ensemble, you may need to coach improvisation in
order to get the right approach, result, and characterizations. How you coach
improvisation depends on the kind of player you are coaching. As an over-
broad generalization and oversimplification, I present three categories of
improvisers, for the purpose of discussing coaching silent film improvisation.
These are the classical musician who is primarily trained to read, the musician
from a jazz or pop background who is primarily trained to improvise over a
chord chart, and the free improviser who may come already skilled in creative
approaches but needs work in ensemble playing or following a film.
Classical musicians – those from western traditions accustomed to read-
ing fully notated parts – may need to be drawn out from shyness or reserve.
They may benefit from simple exercises or games, like playing high or play-
ing low, or playing loud or playing soft, depending on how bright the screen
glows, or how high you raise your hand. Anything to take their minds off
what they are playing (as far as pitch, key, melody) and allowing them to
make sound and noise. Experimental films, like the Five Film Exercises by
John and James Whitney, are great for this: players can be challenged to
tempo-match the speed of the visuals, or play anything but only when they
see a certain color.
Players from jazz, funk, rock, and popular music foundations provide a
particular challenge, as they tend to view improvisation as “soloing” over
chord changes in a chart. This approach has musical validity and opportuni-
ties for showcasing virtuosity, but the problem for silent film is that it tends
to center the player rather than support the film. Or, these solos disappear into
the musical bed without clearly connecting to onscreen action. The challenge
is to coach these players to ignore tonality, to ignore what other people may
be playing, and to venture outside key areas, outside established tempos, and
to follow onscreen action tightly in a gestural way. You can use the same
exercises described above. You can have pop-rock-jazz players make sounds
following onscreen action without anyone else playing, so there is no chart,
no musical background, encouraging them to use improvisation as a means
92 Communicate your score
to escape tonality. Following that, move them towards performing atonal
improvisations that mimic onscreen action, while trampling over tonal mate-
rial (a character theme or mood music) that others might be playing.
You want to take players steeped in popular tonal genres out of what gui-
tarist and author Derek Bailey calls “idiomatic improvisation:” regurgitating
common tropes whose form and material derive from established genre expec-
tations and clichéd idiosyncrasies of an instrument.12 Idiomatic improvisation
can feel like random noodling when set to silent film: random not because it’s
failing to follow a chart (which it may follow perfectly well), but because it is
not following onscreen action. There’s often a place for idiomatic improvisa-
tion, but it tends to fall flat for mickey-mousing characters or action.
Experienced improvisers and established musicians on the free improv or
creative music scenes may still need to learn to perform appropriate charac-
terizations and to listen to and make space for other players. They may still
be learning to take direction and to better understand the film, rather than just
seeing live score as an unbridled opportunity for self-expression. Experienced
improvisers can end up being your strongest players, but you may need to
frame coaching in terms of the direction you want in characterization, empha-
sis, and tone, as well as what onscreen action deserves attention, where sub-
tlety is called for, and structuring dynamics.
Notation techniques
The type of notation you use impacts how much rehearsal time you need,
how much time players need to study their parts, how identical or unique live
performances are, and how easily they are executed. This section examines
various notation types and how they affect score preparation, rehearsal time,
and live performance.
osferatu full score © 1989 by Richard Marriott and Gino Robair. Note the
Figure 4.1 N
use of Repeat 1, Vamp A, and Vamp B. Vamps help a conductor fit a live
score precisely to the picture, even with an orchestra.
Find a silent film scene. Notice structural points you would like music
to accent.
1. Write some notated music for the scene (this can be for just one
instrument). Use vamps to fill time between the structural events.
Try using vamps of different lengths: one bar, two bars, up to four
bars. What works best?
2. How can you make a vamp less obvious? Can you incorporate first
and second endings, or allow an instrument to solo ad lib over the
vamp?
Lead sheet
Lead sheets communicate a lot of information in a small space. They can be
read by many players, including those in a traditional jazz or pop “rhythm
94 Communicate your score
section,” like guitar, bass, banjo, and piano. In Figure 4.2, you can imagine a
melodic instrument might take the melody; a guitar or keyboard might comp
an accompaniment implied by the chord chart, paying attention to extended
harmonies, like ninths; and a bass or low instrument might anchor the root
notes. A flute or oboe might play the tune an octave up. The lead sheet can be
seen as a guide to a fuller arrangement players realize appropriately.
If your group is a little bigger, you might include an extra voice or part.
This is not strictly necessary; a very good player may be able to comp an
implied interior line by ear, or through their knowledge of counterpoint and
music theory. If that part isn’t quite what you had in mind, a second voice fits
nicely on the staff, as shown in Figure 4.3. It also can provide an alternative
melody, for a variation.
Figure 4.4 shows the same lead sheet, transposed for B♭ instruments.
Some players of B♭ instruments (like clarinet or trumpet) may be able to read
Figure 4.2 L
ead sheet. Excerpt from “Millie” from Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Jack
Curtis Dubowsky © 2018 De Stijl Music.
Figure 4.3 L
ead sheet with second voice. Excerpt from “Millie” from Dr. Jekyll and
Mr. Hyde by Jack Curtis Dubowsky © 2018 De Stijl Music.
Figure 4.4 L
ead sheet with second voice transposed for B♭ instruments. Excerpt from
“Millie” from Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Jack Curtis Dubowsky © 2018
De Stijl Music.
Communicate your score 95
a simple score in concert key, transposing their part at sight, but this should
never be presumed.
Short score
With a small ensemble, musicians can play directly from an annotated short
score: low voices take bass clef; high voices take high parts; middle voices
navigate interior lines. One benefit is that players’ parts, if complex, do not
need courtesy cue notes; players can see on the page what others are playing.
A simple short score is shown in Figure 4.5. There is deliberately no chord
chart in this example, but it clearly shows the arrangement in three to four
voices. The second ending of [B] is shown in a cue-sized note, with a clarify-
ing “f 2nd x” comment; this economizes the score. The ossia measures, a cue-
sized third staff floating above [A], show how the score should be realized in
four-part harmony, giving it an alternate realization.
Figure 4.6 shows a short score in two staves, condensing what could be up
to four independent parts. You’ll notice that stem direction helps differentiate
the three parts in the treble clef.
Figure 4.5 S
hort score. “Love Theme” from The Mark of Zorro by Jack Curtis
Dubowsky © 2017 De Stijl Music.
Figure 4.6 A
short score in two staves. Excerpt from Nosferatu by Jack Curtis
Dubowsky © 2018 De Stijl Music.
96 Communicate your score
Figure 4.7 B
ox notation. Excerpt from Mist by Jack Curtis Dubowsky © 2013 De Stijl
Music.
Box notation
Box notation is a contemporary practice seen in the scores of John Corigliano
and others (see Figure 4.7). Any desired effect or gesture that continues over
time can be put in a box, and a line or arrow indicates its duration. An environ-
mental effect, a section of mickey-mousing, frightened string tremolos, or an
agitated scherzo figure, can all be put inside boxes, saving space on the page
and simplifying the score.
Notice that rests are removed; ideally, rests should not appear when a
player is playing, even if there is no standard notation for that bit. To avoid
confusion, rests should always indicate a player is resting.
Text instructions
Instead of carefully notating a frightened string tremolo and putting it in a
box, one can just write “frightened trems” and give that to string players. They
will know what to do. Likewise, an environmental effect or mickey-mousing
section can be handled this way. You can simply put a character’s name in a
musician’s part – “Ellen” – and they will use that as a cue to “play” or mickey-
mouse that character. This may require direction or coaching by the composer
to indicate how that character should be played: is Ellen frightened or suspi-
cious? Do you like the player’s interpretation, or does it need to be toned down
or adjusted?
Referring back to Chapter 3, Figure 2, you can see how composer Beth
Custer simply dropped text instructions into the bass clarinet and trumpet
parts: “Improvise duo w/Chris: fight in paper quoting Hoedown; improvise
briefcase, etc.” We would have to see the film for the instructions to make
complete sense, but in just a few words Custer has stated clearly what she
Communicate your score 97
wants, without having to bother with detailed notation. (Note that this score
would be clearer with the rests removed in those parts.)
Word score
Players that know a film well, have a strong musical memory, and can think
about music verbally can write out a word score that documents what they
want. Below, Figure 4.8, is a page from Terry Donahue’s part to the Alloy
Orchestra’s score for Metropolis. Donahue explains this is “Just my percus-
sion/accordion parts. You might be able to tell that for me the score is largely
memorized with little reminders.”13
Figure 4.8 E
xcerpt from Terry Donahue’s part from Alloy Orchestra’s Metropolis
score. Used by permission.
98 Communicate your score
Donahue’s score contains structural landmarks (BABEL), picture notes
(“Maria hand gesture”), and musical reminders (“intro 4x melody 1x”).
Additionally, Donahue sketched in some notation at the bottom of the page.
Note the missing clef and time signature; these are not necessary since it is
just a memory aid.
There are benefits to a word score: you can cover a lot of screen time in
just one page, writing down only what’s important or needs reminding. It has
simplicity and efficiency.
There are drawbacks to a word score: it tends to be understandable only
to whoever wrote it, or would require explanation to a substitute player. It is
not complete documentation: revisiting it, say, ten years later, even its author
might not remember what was intended.
Figure 4.9 E
xcerpt from The Mark of Zorro theme sheets by Jack Curtis Dubowsky
© 2017 De Stijl Music. These themes can be heard on the Jack Curtis
Dubowsky Ensemble album, Zorro (2017).
following the chord chart. The [FR] or fragment version is a shorter iteration
of the theme that can be cycled as a vamp.
A short score facilitates swapping parts or voices within an arrangement.
“Troopers Theme” section [A] shows two independent voices which could be
swapped; [B] shows only one melody, saving space on the page. In both sec-
tions, chords and bass are specified in the chart. “Pulidos Theme” section [A]
is presented as a lead sheet; section [B] notates two independent outer voices,
treble and bass, which are unlikely to be swapped.
100 Communicate your score
You may notice omission of tempos. You can have tempos in a theme
sheet; this is often a wise idea. In this case, as you might imagine, tempos are
given by the conductor and/or are given in the cue book, so themes can adapt
to different circumstances in the film. The book can restructure the music, so
a theme might start on [B] rather than [A], or it might follow a unique map, or
pattern of repetitions. Cues might end halfway through a theme; these unique
timings can be handled by the conductor or added to the cue book.
Some of these themes could be memorized; even so, having theme sheets
open during rehearsal or performance is practical and reassuring. Theme
sheets work in conjunction with a cue book, which details the organizational
structure of the whole score.
The cue book lists screen cues sequentially (see Figure 4.10). Every detail
that needs attention can be listed, with time indices to facilitate rehearsal if
desired. This provides written documentation of the whole film, scene-by-
scene, shot-by-shot, or in any combination thereof, as needed. The cue book
may be many pages long, depending on the level of detail.
The very process of preparing a cue book is helpful, not just for live per-
formance, but for spotting and composition as well (as discussed in Chapter
2). The cue book lays out the film in a linear fashion, allowing you to see sev-
eral minutes at once, including major topography (scenes), structural points,
cards, and minor details (“They stop, SHAKE HANDS”).
Begin preparing the cue book with the CUES column on the left. Then,
you can use empty instrument lanes to sketch where themes start and stop,
what will bridge scenes, and what will hit important action moments. As you
continue to score the film, you see how instruments trade off, where tuttis are,
how to make things dovetail or overlap, and how to keep things interesting
musically and dramatically.
Each player has a column in the cue book. In the example shown, there
are six players; the violinist doubles on viola, and the clarinetist doubles on
bass clarinet. In each column are instructions for their own individual part.
Box notation or instructions fit inside the column; boxes (or arrows) indicate
durations.
Instructions can refer to a theme by name: “Illness” or “Happy Times,” for
instance.14 (The music for those themes is on a theme sheet, so it is not neces-
sary for it to appear in the cue book!) Some players might play a theme, while
others simultaneously improvise characters (“MM Hutter,” “MM Bulwer,”
MM being short for mickey-mouse), or create environmental effects or tex-
tures (“staccato soup”). This leads to greater depth and breadth in the score.
A map has been penciled in for the “Happy Times” theme: careful order-
ing of four sections, [1], [2], [3], and [4], and their repeats. The decision to
place the theme here came first, and the precise calculation of the map for best
effect worked out later.15 Such a map can be written into the book or can be
indicated by a conductor (holding up fingers), or both. Arrows indicate where
flute, violin, and bass join the keyboard playing [1], approximately at the long
Communicate your score 101
Figure 4.10 E
xcerpt from Nosferatu cue book by Jack Curtis Dubowsky © 2018 De
Stijl Music.
shot of the steeple (2:33). Keys and bass end at the black before “SCENE 2,”
leaving flute and violin to carry on with a duet rendition of [1] and [2].
Notice that “Death [I] fantasia” has been added to the book in the key-
board part, penciled in at “CARD: Directed by.” The cue book system makes
102 Communicate your score
Figure 4.11 E
xcerpt from Sunrise cue book by Jack Curtis Dubowsky © 2019 De Stijl
Music.
it relatively easy to add (or cut) things, whether in rehearsal or after much
consideration (compared to rewriting a fully notated score).
Figure 4.11 shows an excerpt from another cue book, Sunrise: A Song
of Two Humans. In this book, theme sections like “Danger” [1], [2], [3]
Communicate your score 103
are already figured out; dotted horizontal lines approximate where section
changes occur. “Top line” in [3] violin specifies a part (or voice) within a
theme notated in short score (or in multiple voices).
There are places where players pay attention to different things. When
“Man strangles woman” (14:17), three players track the fight while one player
mickey-mouses the man, another the woman. During the “Music Hall” tutti,
five players play the theme while the flute tracks camera movement (“pan,”
“tilt up”), and the clarinet spins off into a “crazy solo” to hit the City Woman
dancing (15:38). The bass spins off to mickey-mouse a “leg grab.”
During Scene 2j, the flute plays an environmental effect (“breeze”) against
the violin and bass; the texture is thin here, so adding this flute effect works
nicely, making the score richer.
At the very bottom of the page, care was taken to make an easy page turn.
This is a concern with cue books, although you may notice that keys and bass
could turn the page ahead of time. Sometimes, you may elect to not fill an
entire page, if it will help a page turn. You may notice places where players
can turn the page ahead of time, or where players can pencil in at the bottom
what is coming next (see Figure 4.10). (Sometimes players can turn the page
after the fact if needed.)
The themes and cue book system works best with a limited number of
players, up to about eight at most, unless they are doubled on a part. Benefits
include ease of rehearsals, accommodation of both structured improvisation
and notated themes, independence of parts, and unique performances. A con-
ductor (who may be one of the players) coordinates entrances and exits, espe-
cially of notated themes that are played together. A conductor may need to
signal which section of a theme is coming up, by holding up a finger(s); for
this reason, it is best not to exceed five sections per theme.
There are a few drawbacks to this system. Players must focus their attention
on four places: (1) watching the screen, (2) watching the conductor, (3) follow-
ing the cue book, and (4) consulting theme sheets as necessary. With practice,
this becomes easier: players learn to watch the screen when improvising but
turn their attention toward the conductor when a group entrance is approaching.
This system tends to encourage thematic writing that is succinct and mod-
ular; this might not be everyone’s cup of tea. But succinct and modular writ-
ing often benefits film scoring; being able to shift or end a theme quickly helps
fit themes to tight onscreen timings more easily.
1. Make a cue book, without any instrument lanes yet, just writing
down all the cues, cards, and significant moments that may inform
104 Communicate your score
the score. See how much detail you can get in. See how you can best
abbreviate cues and cards. Try using indications such as Int. and
Ext. for interior and exterior. Try notating camera angles if needed:
“2 shot,” “wide,” “long,” “close,” and so on.
2. Using three lanes, see what kind of structure you can concoct. You
can plan the themes topographically, but do not compose them at
this point. Consider what the themes would be composed for: cer-
tain characters? Certain places? Certain ideas?
3. Using five lanes, see what kind of structure you can make.
4. Knowing now what themes you need or want, go and compose
them. How well does it all fit together? Could you also write the
themes in advance, and then make the cue book?
Figure 4.12 B
utch Morris arpeggio indication: “Arpeggio. When the directive is given,
followed by a down beat, the instrumentalist elaborates and embellishes
whatever she/he is doing through arpeggiation.” Laurence D. “Butch”
Morris. The Art of Conduction – A Conduction Workbook, Daniela
Veronesi Ed. (New York: Karma). ©2017 Lawrence Butch Morris Legacy
Project. Used by permission.
may not always succeed in closely tracking the film. Timing may suffer if
the conductor doesn’t know the film adequately or if the ensemble responds
unevenly.
Conductor hand symbols can be combined with other methods. Many con-
ductor gestures are already standardized, such as crescendos, diminuendos,
beat patterns, and regulating tempo. A conductor may make a sad face or a
happy face to emphasize how a scene or moment should be played. Techniques
can be combined; a composer might write a “main theme” and assign a hand
signal to indicate that theme should be played as composed.
106 Communicate your score
Combinations
These techniques and systems can be combined. Overtures or closing music
might be fully notated, while other sections are improvised using a word score
or other notational method.
Nosferatu, as supplied on 35mm film, begins with an “Overture” card –
no screen action, simply that card, holding for 1:25. My ensemble adopted
sheet music for that overture; we then hit the following card “Nosferatu” all
together, and move right into the cue book (see Figure 4.10).
A conductor using a vocabulary of hand gestures can have a unique
signal (or signals) to play a particular theme (or themes) which can be
notated or learned in advance. This combines conduction with pre-com-
posed material, allowing a large ensemble to entirely pivot from abstract
interpretation to a precise tune. This conductor could also use such a sig-
nal to have some players play the notated theme, while others overlap it
with something else.
You might have a short score that incorporates box notation or graphic
notation, or that explodes into multiple staves when greater detail is neces-
sary. Text instructions can be added to any score, to help clarify a desired
effect if parts are notated or incorporate extended techniques.
You might have a situation where different players have their own
extracted, personalized parts, but one may have a word score, and another
may have a notated score, or something else. In Sunrise, we had an organ solo
in the cathedral (ca. 00:41:15), for which the keyboardist and bassist alone
had notated parts. No one else was playing; others followed along in the cue
book, while the bassist and keyboardist took a detour on one page of sheet
music.
You may imagine other combinations that suit your goals and intentions.
Switching between systems can be disorienting, but it can work well. It’s
Communicate your score 107
wise to choose in advance notation types and means of communicating your
score, as this will speed up its preparation. Available forces, rehearsal time,
and the film itself may inform these decisions. If you can only afford one “run
through” with your group, notation will need to be straightforward, whatever
system you adopt.
Knowing your players’ strengths and limitations helps ascertain the best
approach. Some players may be thrown off by complex notation. Other play-
ers may be thrown by a lack of clear notation. In the best of all possible worlds,
you will have a system that fits your music and time enough to rehearse it with
your players.
Figure 4.13 J ack Curtis Dubowsky Ensemble players face the screen; conductor has a
tablet to see film. Photo by Karen Axelton-Dibble.
indicate they need a cue; they may look at the screen to show they know their
cue from the screen; they may indicate they are lost, they are having trouble
hearing another player, or they are annoyed that another player is stomping all
over their part (for example, if players are mickey-mousing a scene together).
This book encourages collaboration and improvisation in performance. The
conductor is not the apex of a hierarchy, but rather a bus driver, keeping eve-
ryone together, not hanging out the windows. The conductor knows the road
they are traveling, including its hazards.
The conductor should know the film really well, to follow inferior image
quality or tricky sightlines. Ideally, the conductor has the film memorized,
and just needs to orient themselves temporally within the film. Players who
need to play onscreen action and mickey-mouse should be given preferential
view of the screen.
In cases where it is technically feasible, the conductor may have their
own video feed from the projection booth. Figure 4.14 shows the conductor’s
video feed from Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans score for orchestra and cho-
rus by Jeff Beal. Note the condensed score at the bottom, enlarged rehearsal
mark [I2], cue name [6. The Boat Ride], and bar and beat numbers [600|4].
The vertical streamer on the right, shown mid-travel across the screen, indi-
cates an upcoming rehearsal mark and sync point, [K2]. (Additionally, a thin
vertical line moves through the condensed score, likely not visible on this
printed page.)
This video feed (Figure 4.14) allows a conductor to achieve precise syn-
chronization; the orchestra and chorus follow the conductor without having
Communicate your score 109
Figure 4.14 S unrise: A Song of Two Humans score for orchestra and chorus by Jeff
Beal, conductor video feed. © 2019 St. Rose Music Publishing Co. Inc.
and Associated Music Publishers, Inc. Used by permission.
to see the screen. The composer can have a highly accurate reproduction of
their intention. This method imposes technical and budgetary demands on the
preparation and production of the score.
While, in theory, giving the conductor a dedicated video feed sounds rea-
sonable, in practice it is often difficult: ordinary movie theaters are typically
not set up to do this and have no provision for splitting off and running a video
line that would need to be hundreds of feet in length. In cases where theaters
are projecting actual 35mm film, it is virtually impossible: there simply is no
video feed at all, just light from the projector. A practical solution in these
cases is to have the conductor use a tablet to see the screen behind them.
Large-screen tablets are now commonly used to read sheet music, and
there are many options available for mounting tablets to microphone stands
or music stands. The tablet is put in a “selfie” camera mode, locked on, and
positioned so the conductor sees the screen behind themselves. This can be
done with a mobile phone, although having a larger tablet screen makes it
easier. The tablet in Figure 4.15 is attached to a microphone stand using a
commercially available mount. It can be angled to show the screen behind
the conductor. The tablet’s camera exposure setting should be locked so the
image remains clear and in focus. A power cable, while perhaps unnecessary,
ensures the tablet remains charged under unforeseen circumstances.
One issue with a tablet as rearview mirror is that the image will be flipped:
things on the left will appear on the right, and text on intertitle cards will be
backwards. All the more reason the conductor must know the film exceed-
ingly well and rehearse with the mirrored image.
110 Communicate your score
Figure 4.15 C
onductor and author Jack Curtis Dubowsky facing ensemble with tablet
to see screen. Photo by Scott Heustis.
Clarity
With players in the dark, distracted by the film, audience, sheet music, and
perhaps a cue book, it helps for the conductor to be as clear and large as pos-
sible. This is not an environment where players look for subtle gestures. They
are trying their best to keep it together, and clarity is essential.
Beat patterns should be clear, consistent, and visible. Like a bus driver,
the conductor should know the hazards of the road and know when a turn is
coming up. Cues for particular players should be comfortably prepared – even
if this is just eye contact – and not thrown out in a last-second panic. Tempos
should be established clearly and confidently.
Helping balances
An important role of the conductor is to help balances in an impartial way, so
that some players don’t overwhelm others, and proper balances are achieved
musically and for dramatic effect.
Early rehearsals are best left for getting through the whole film and fine-
tuning arrangements. Balances can be addressed in subsequent rehearsals.
Balances tend to work themselves out over time: once players know what
is going on and start listening to each other, they tend to balance themselves
without much adjustment. Listening to others is a skill, and playing live scores
helps players listen to each other.
While balances can be worked on in rehearsal, once you get to a perfor-
mance venue with different acoustics, it can be a different matter. Having a
few minutes to sound check and play through tuttis or passages with varying
dynamics and instrumentation is a necessity. Players can hear the acoustics
and rebalance; the conductor can run into the auditorium, listen, and give
impartial notes on how to compensate for the acoustic qualities of the space.
Another issue is balancing mickey-mousing against musical themes
that play simultaneously. Coaching mickey-mousing is discussed above in
the improvisation section. A conductor may manage how subtle or blatant
mickey-mousing is as a matter of balance and register.
Equipment
To effectively communicate your score to an audience, you depend on hav-
ing proper equipment at the show. It is advisable to have a checklist of gear
needed for the performance. This can include music stands, stand lights,
power strips, power cables, instrument stands, and amplifiers. It can also
include promotional items, like merch, and notes for introducing the film.
Your needs will vary, of course, but you want to know that everything will
be there.
Communicate your score 113
Given the players and gear at your disposal, write out an equipment list
for yourself, or for the group as a whole. What do you need to bring?
What would cause problems if lost or forgotten? Are there any items
for which you would bring extras or a backup?
A conclusion
Composing for silent film offers creative opportunities for unconventional,
avant-garde music and the chance to make something genuinely appreciated
by a large audience. This overlap of creativity and appreciation is something
very precious to musicians.
Here’s some context. While working in Hollywood “show business” –
with its petty demands, pedestrian tastes, and “sausage making” mentality – I
struggled to get “new music” ensembles to program a five-minute piece to an
audience of 40 folding chairs.18
At the same time, I built under my own name a group that could sell out a
historic theater with hundreds and sometimes thousands of seats. Especially
towards the beginning, these scores could be pretty corny at times, which is
how I developed my distaste for film funning and other banal techniques.
The more I watched and rehearsed silent films, the more I noticed. It took
me repeated viewings to realize that mirrors are a central theme in Dr. Jekyll
and Mr. Hyde, because everyone needs to see themselves to know how far
they have fallen.19 It took repeated viewings to realize how portrayals of
Indigenous people permeate The Mark of Zorro.20 It took repeated viewings
to realize why The Wife carries a scarf throughout most of Sunrise.21
In grasping the depth and subtlety of silent film, I slowly put my finger on
what was missing from others’ live score performances: attention to this level
of detail. If I could faithfully bring out all these details for a spectator who was
watching a film for the first (or even the tenth) time, it would be a whole new
magnificent experience. And indeed, after seeing our live scores, many silent
film fans told us they had picked up on things they had never noticed before.
You can do this too. Regardless of your level of training, whether you have
an orchestra or a kazoo, there is music to be made, audiences to entertain.
Live scores are live performance, where mistakes can be made and accidents
occur. You have a chance to make music that is not a grab bag of current “film
music” clichés, but something that highlights your own unique voice.
Much contemporary concert music is reflexively touted as “experimental.”
In live scores, you can make actual experiments: you can try things in differ-
ent ways. You can change things up. You can try repeating an experiment and
114 Communicate your score
see if you get the same reaction from a different audience. You can work on
a score as much as you like, refining it as you better know the film and show
your work to different audiences. There is no deadline, no final version. The
score becomes, ultimately, an abstraction. It exists as a set of instructions you
give to your players, their interpretation of it, and an idealized version that can
never be fully notated. It doesn’t need to be performed exactly the same way
twice; people will come back to see it again and again. This keeps silent film
alive and vibrant for today and tomorrow.
Notes
1 Dubowsky, Jack Curtis. (2021). Easy Listening and Film Scoring 1948–78. (New
York: Routledge).
2 Eisler, Hanns. (1941). “Film Music–work in progress” in Historical Journal of
Film, Radio and Television, Vol. 18, No. 4, 1998. p. 591.
3 See Dubowsky, Jack Curtis. (2016). Intersecting Film, Music, and Queerness.
(Basingstoke: Palgrave). pp. 31–5.
4 Eisler, Hanns. (1941). “Film Music–work in progress” in Historical Journal of
Film, Radio and Television, Vol. 18, No. 4, 1998. p. 592.
5 Audiovisual technician and historian Stephen Handzo attributes the term “mickey-
mousing” to producer David O. Selznick (1902–65) describing a score by Max
Steiner that followed action with cartoon-like accuracy. Handzo, Stephen. (1985).
“Appendix: A Narrative Glossary of Film Sound Techniques” in Film Found:
Theory and Practice. Edited by E. Weis and G. Belton, G. pp. 409–10. (New York:
Columbia University Press).
6 Bar charts (or bar sheets) are discussed in Tietyen, David. (1990). The Musical
World of Walt Disney. pp. 13–14. (Milwaukee, WI: Hal Leonard); Goldmark, Daniel.
(2005). Tunes for ’Toons: Music and the Hollywood Cartoon. p. 20. (Berkeley, CA:
University of California Press); and Levitan, Eli L. (1962). Animation Art in the
Commercial Film. pp. 62, 185. (New York: Reinhold).
7 Responsiveness to onscreen action in film is discussed in Chapter 2, “Musical
Cachet in The Living End and the New Queer Cinema” in Dubowsky, Jack Curtis.
(2016). Intersecting Film, Music, and Queerness. (Basingstoke:Palgrave).
8 For further discussion of the use of mood music or easy listening music in mid-
century film scores, see Dubowsky, Jack Curtis. (2021). Easy Listening and Film
Scoring 1948–78. (New York, NY:Routledge).
9 London, Kurt. Translated by Eric S. Bensinger. (1936). Film Music: A Summary
of the Characteristic Features of Its History, Aesthetics, Technique; and Possible
Developments. (London: Faber & Faber Ltd.). p. 41. (Emphasis in original; written
in 1933 according to the dust jacket.)
10 Erdmann, Hans, Becce, Giuseppe, and Brav, Ludwig. (1927). Allgemeines
Handbuch der Film- Musik. (Berlin-Lichterfelde, Leipzig: Schlesinger). (2020
reprint: Berlin: Ries & Erler).
11 Rapée, Ernö. (1924). Motion Picture Moods for Pianists and Organists. (New
York: G. Schirmer, Inc.).
12 Bailey, Derek. (1992). Improvisation: Its Nature and Practice in Music. (Boston,
MA: Da Capo Press). pp. xi–xii.
13 Donahue, Terry. (2021). Email to author. July 6.
14 The indication “JOIN” means to join the keyboard already playing the theme.
“MYOE” means “make your own exit,” presumably at the end of a phrase, to be ready
Communicate your score 115
for the approaching mickey-mousing. In practice, it helps to have a conductor assist
these entrances and exits. You can invent your own abbreviations for instructions.
15 You can see some penciled calculations: at qu=120, ten 8-bar phrases will be 120
seconds, or two minutes. This covers the keyboard’s section from (2:12) “I have
reflected” to (4:17) “Embrace.”
16 A four-page PDF of a set of rules to John Zorn’s unpublished Cobra (1984) can
be found online on various websites. As of this writing, it can be found at https://
hermes.neocities.org/zorn-cobra-score.pdf and at https://web.archive.org/web
/20130128204544/http://www.4-33.com/scores/cobra/cobra-notes.html (accessed
June 28, 2023).
17 There are many basic, practical conducting textbooks. Two examples are:
Bailey, Wayne. (2009). Conducting: The Art of Communication. (New York:
Oxford University Press); and Phillips, Kenneth H. (1997). Basic Techniques of
Conducting. (New York: Oxford University Press).
18 I’m putting “scare quotes” around these common expressions. The particular “show
business” I mean here is the world of studio and network film and television. “How
the sausage is made” is a common expression for the below-the-line work in film and
television, whose processes are standardized and formulaic. “New music” is a genre of
contemporary concert music – widely discussed by authors including Alex Ross, Will
Robin, Paul Griffiths, and others – that functions largely to advance academic careers
in coordination with a highly networked and competitive arts industrial complex.
19 The tip off for this, for me, was the mirror in the opium den. Wait, why would there
even be a mirror in an opium den? *lightbulb*
20 It should be noted that The Mark of Zorro is also a classic “white savior” story,
which became a common Hollywood movie trope. Still, and notably for the time
period, the consistently positive Indigenous portrayals are an attempt to give the
film greater depth and realism.
21 When the scarf is found floating in the water (ca. 01:24:20), the audience should
infer that the Wife has drowned.
Bibliography
Altman, Rick. (2004). Silent Film Sound (New York: Columbia University Press).
Bailey, Derek. (1992). Improvisation: Its Nature and Practice in Music (Boston, MA:
Da Capo Press).
Bailey, Wayne. (2009). Conducting: The Art of Communication (New York: Oxford
University Press).
Dubowsky, Jack Curtis. (2016). Intersecting Film, Music, and Queerness (Basingstoke:
Palgrave).
Dubowsky, Jack Curtis. (2021). Easy Listening and Film Scoring 1948–78 (New York:
Routledge).
Eisler, Hanns. (1941). “Film Music–work in progress.” Historical Journal of Film,
Radio and Television, Vol. 18, No. 4, 1998.
Erdmann, Hans, Becce, Giuseppe, and Brav, Ludwig. (1927). Allgemeines Handbuch
der Film-Musik (Berlin-Lichterfelde, Leipzig: Schlesinger) (2020 reprint: Berlin:
Ries & Erler).
Goldmark, Daniel. (2005). Tunes for ’Toons: Music and the Hollywood Cartoon
(Berkeley, CA: University of California Press), p. 20.
Handzo, Stephen. (1985). “Appendix: A Narrative Glossary of Film Sound Techniques.”
In Film Found: Theory and Practice. Edited by E. Weis and G. Belton (New York:
Columbia University Press), pp. 409–10.
116 Communicate your score
Levitan, Eli L. (1962). Animation Art in the Commercial Film (New York: Reinhold),
pp. 62, 185.
London, Kurt. (1936). Film Music: A Summary of the Characteristic Features of Its
History, Aesthetics, Technique; and Possible Developments. Translated by Eric S.
Bensinger (London: Faber & Faber Ltd.).
Phillips, Kenneth H. (1997). Basic Techniques of Conducting (New York: Oxford
University Press).
Rapée, Ernö. (1924). Motion Picture Moods for Pianists and Organists (New York: G.
Schirmer, Inc.).
Roads, Curtis. (1996). The Computer Music Tutorial (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press).
Roads, Curtis. (2023). The Computer Music Tutorial, Second Edition (Cambridge, MA:
The MIT Press).
Shockley, Alan. (2018). The Contemporary Piano: A Performer and Composer’s Guide
to Techniques and Resources (New York: Rowman & Littlefield).
Tietyen, David. (1990). The Musical World of Walt Disney (Milwaukee, WI: Hal
Leonard), pp. 13–14.
Zorn, John. (1984). Cobra (New York: Unpublished manuscript).
Glossary
archetype in literature and film, a character type or story readily and com-
munally understood by an audience. The good man unjustly framed who
has become an outlaw but has the moral high ground, for example.
backstory the story behind fictional characters, their motivation and his-
tory, whether presented onscreen or not.
blocking how actors are positioned and move relative to the camera.
bookends related scenes or images that start and end a film or sequence.
cards an area for text across the whole screen.
comping in music (especially jazz), a method of improvising a part over a
given chord chart.
composite optical printing a technique using an optical printer and layers
of film that makes dissolves, transitions, and various visual effects, by
rephotographing the film frame by frame.
condensed score a score, in two to four staves, that condenses the parts in
a larger full score.
conduction (music) a conducting and composition technique developed
by Butch Morris whereby a vocabulary of gestures informs spontaneous
improvisation and performance.
conforming adjusting music to match changes in the picture edit of a film.
continuity (film) the concern for keeping everything temporally continu-
ous, so props don’t mysteriously appear or disappear, clothing and hair-
styles remain constant, and sequences of events remain logical (unless
otherwise intended).
controlled acting acting approach advocated by Coquelin, Pennington, and
others, in which the actor remains in control of their emotions, in order
to better perform through practiced gestures.
coverage (film) film shot from a variety of angles and multiple takes, to
allow the film editor to cut a scene that isn’t just one static shot, or that
is missing desired shots.
crane shot motion picture photography taken from a crane, enabling high
views and dramatic camera motion.
cue (music) a piece of music in a film; can refer to the place in a film where
a piece of music will go, delimited by its start and stop points.
118 Glossary
period (music theory) two or more phrases that combine to make a longer
melody.
photoplay motion picture scenario; portmanteau dating from the
Nickelodeon era, in particular 1910–15, combining photography and
play, often used synonymously with motion picture, emphasizing the
idea of a play in pictures.
pick-up (film) an added shoot, to add missing details or fix issues with
scenes shot earlier.
pitch set (music) group of selected pitches; these do not need to belong to
any scale or mode.
plot the organization of story into structural elements such as acts, scenes,
and order of exposition.
point of view (camera) a shot filmed from how a particular character would
see it.
prelap music or sound that precedes and leads us into a following scene or
location. (Can be used as a noun or verb.)
prepared piano in contemporary music, a piano that has been modified to
make unusual sounds, often by inserting objects in its strings.
reaction shot a shot of a character(s) reacting to something. Can provide
information about what happened, its gravity or humor; gives the film
editor footage to cut to avoid a static shot. Sometimes relied upon to
amplify action, for example, if a visual effect is not convincing, the reac-
tion indicates how the director would like it perceived.
reel container for film wound around a spool and protected by flanges. A
reel is loaded into a projector to be projected.
register (musical) a frequency range, high or low, where an instrument or
voice lives comfortably.
restorations films preserved, repaired, and otherwise readied for renewed
viewing. Processes involved are time consuming and expensive; restora-
tions are subject to copyright for the work done, even if the underlying
dramatic work (story, characters, imagery) is public domain.
reveal the onscreen moment an audience sees or learns something.
scherzo a fast piece of music.
screen time the total amount of time a character or object appears onscreen
in a film.
sequence (film) a section with a logical thread; can be a group of continuous
scenes. Often isolated for concentrated work (scoring, editing, refining).
sequence (music) a brief musical phrase or motive that repeats and alters
through modulation or changes in underlying chords or harmony.
sight lines what people can see in the positioning of an ensemble for film;
the matrix of visibility in arranging a group.
sneak a sound or musical gesture for a character sneaking.
Glossary 121