基本説明
Describes how musical and visual codes work together in music video and reveals modes of representing race, class, gender, and sexuality that have come to characterize the music video form.
Full Description
Music videos have ranged from simple tableaux of a band playing its instruments to multimillion dollar, high-concept extravaganzas. Born of a sudden expansion in new broadcast channels, music videos continue to exert an enormous influence on popular music. They help to create an artist's identity, to affect a song's mood, to determine chart success: the music video has changed our idea of the popular song. Here at last is a study that treats music video as a distinct multimedia artistic genre, different from film, television, and indeed from the songs they illuminate-and sell. Carol Vernallis describes how verbal, musical, and visual codes combine in music video to create defining representations of race, class, gender, sexuality, and performance. The book explores the complex interactions of narrative, settings, props, costumes, lyrics, and much more. Three chapters contain close analyses of important videos: Madonna's "Cherish," Prince's "Gett Off," and Peter Gabriel's "Mercy St."
Contents
Acknowledgements Introduction Theory Telling and Not Telling Editing Actors Settings Props and Costumes Interlude: Space, Color, Texture, and Time Lyrics Musical Parameters Connections Among Music, Image, and Lyrics Analytical Methods Analyses The Aesthetics of Music Video: An Analysis of Madonna's "Cherish" Desire, Opulence, and Musical Authority: The Relation of Music and Image in Prince's "Gett Off" Peter Gabriel's Elegy for Anne Sexton: Image and Music in "Mercy St." Afterword Notes Bibliography Index