[Full Score] SHADOWS OF THE STUDIO (Elim Chan-Univ. of Michigan Symphony Orchestra)-Jules Pegram

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 24 เม.ย. 2024
  • Jules Pegram: SHADOWS OF THE STUDIO for Orchestra
    *For best results, click Settings pinwheel (bottom right of video) and select 2160p60 (4k).
    Elim Chan, conductor
    University of Michigan Symphony Orchestra
    Hill Auditorium
    Ann Arbor, Michigan
    February 8, 2015
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    Score cover design: Peter Shin
    Selected for the Underwood New Music Readings by the American Composers Orchestra
    Full score available for purchase at: www.julespegram.com/shadows-o...
    For rental of Parts set, visit:
    www.julespegram.com/contact
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    SHADOWS OF THE STUDIO for Orchestra is my musical tribute to the glory days of Hollywood’s “studio system,” a factory-like production setup that allowed for the efficient, speedy creation and distribution of quality motion pictures, thousands of which are now considered cinema classics. As recounted in stunning detail by film scholar Thomas Schatz in "The Genius of the System," this landmark era of moviemaking spanned from the rise of the major studios in the 1920s up until the studio system’s ultimate demise in the 1950s. During that illustrious period, moguls like Carl Laemmle at Universal, Daryl Zanuck at 20th Century Fox, the Warner Bros., and Louis B. Mayer and Irving Thalberg of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer fame served as helms of production at their respective studios, reigning over a vast filmic empire the likes of which will surely never be seen again.
    As the work begins, we walk through an old studio’s massive iron gates and into an abandoned soundstage, dust-filled and full of movie relics from days gone by. Out of this dark, funereal texture, the music suddenly starts to build, the studio roars back to life, and we are transported back to the glory days of Hollywood, circa 1940. Once the ratchety sounds of a film projector click us into full gear, a lush, sweeping theme enters, something akin to what one might have heard in a classic Hollywood film noir score. Our musical flashback is all hustle-and-bustle, in a sonic framework as clean and crisp as a motion picture produced by one of the “majors.” We then take an evening flight through the Hollywood Hills, with filmmakers below still hard at work on the set, chic bars and nightclubs booming, spotlights flickering outside a premiere at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, and of course that legendary white sign beaming off in the distance. Eventually the music reaches epic proportions, and Tinseltown is at last restored to its former glory. But this grandiose reimagining of a lost era is little more than a dream, and after an explosive climax the piece gradually fades out to its ghostly conclusion, sending the studio back into the shadows of the past.
    -Jules Pegram (2015)
    For more information, please visit www.julespegram.com
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ความคิดเห็น • 4

  • @nicop8452
    @nicop8452 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Beautiful

  • @NioFromXbox
    @NioFromXbox 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Man, what a refreshing piece! You've taken everything I love about 20th-century orchestra composing and meshed it with everything I love about post-modern composing! I wish I could tell you which parts were my favorite, but I truly loved every second! I did love how you created a lot of tension and misdirection before those heavenly grand chord strikes like in section C! Well done, thank you for sharing!

    • @JulesPegramComposer
      @JulesPegramComposer  12 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Thanks so much for your thoughtful listening & comment, Nio!