Terror Tracks - Music, Sound and Horror Cinema - Philip Hayward

Terror Tracks - Music, Sound and Horror Cinema - Philip Hayward

Incorporating Monsters: Music as Context, Character and Construction in Kubrick’s The Shining

Terror Tracks - Music, Sound and Horror Cinema - Philip Hayward

Jeremy Barham [+-]
University of Surrey
Jeremy Barham is a lecturer in Music at the University of Surrey, where he teaches courses in screen music studies. His research focuses on the use of pre-existent music, science fiction and horror-film scoring, music in experimental and avant-garde film, and musical temporality in film. He is currently working on a monograph for Cambridge University Press entitled Music, Time and the Moving Image.

Description

The films of Stanley Kubrick, particularly from 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) on, were characterized by their innovative approaches to the use of music. Even by Kubrick’s standards, however, The Shining (1980) exemplifies a level of both sophisticated interaction of music and moving image, and general reliance on music for contextual, characterization and narrative purposes, rarely equalled in his output. The film’s almost exclusive use of pre-existent music not only sets it apart from many other contemporaneous and subsequent works in the horror genre but also raises important questions surrounding Kubrick’s conceptual and constructive film aesthetic, and his crucial collaboration with music editor Gordon Stainforth, hitherto rarely acknowledged in the published literature. With the support of material supplied to the author by Stainforth, this chapter will reinvestigate the historical context, methodology and aesthetic and structural consequences of Kubrick’s use of the modernist and avant-garde music of Bartók, Ligeti and Penderecki in the film – a stylistic repertoire, which he first explored in 2001 and admired in Friedkin’s The Exorcist (1973).1 It will examine ways in which the music is employed to project climates of primarily psychological (rather than physical) horror and to embody the omnipresent but unseen malevolence of the alien ‘other’, whether through propelling the narrative in visually static scenes or underpinning passages of vivid action and subverting dialogue in precisely matched scenes of varying length.

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Citation

Barham, Jeremy. Incorporating Monsters: Music as Context, Character and Construction in Kubrick’s The Shining. Terror Tracks - Music, Sound and Horror Cinema. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 137 - 170 Jul 2009. ISBN 9781845532024. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=19129. Date accessed: 28 Mar 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.19129. Jul 2009

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