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Music for Prime Time

A History of American Television Themes and Scoring

Jon Burlingame (Adjunct Assistant Professor, Adjunct Assistant Professor, University of Southern California)

$68.95

Hardback

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English
Oxford University Press Inc
20 September 2023
With hundreds of interviews conducted over a 35-year span, this book is the most comprehensive history of television scoring to date.

Music composed for television had, until recently, never been taken seriously by scholars or critics. Catchy TV themes, often for popular weekly series, were fondly remembered but not considered much more culturally significant than commercial jingles. Yet noted composers like John Williams, Henry Mancini, Jerry Goldsmith and Lalo Schifrin learned and/or honed their craft in television before going on to major success in feature films.

Oscar-winning film composers like Bernard Herrmann, Franz Waxman and Maurice Jarre wrote hours of music for television projects, and such high-profile jazz figures as Duke Ellington, Dave Brubeck and Quincy Jones also contributed music to TV series. Concert-hall luminaries from Aaron Copland to Leonard Bernstein, and theater writers from Jerome Moross to Richard Rodgers, penned memorable scores for TV.

Music for Prime Time is the first serious, journalistic history of music for American television. It is the product of 35 years of research and more than 450 interviews with composers, orchestrators, producers, editors and musicians active in the field. Based on, but vastly expanded and revised from, an earlier book by the same author, this wide-ranging narrative not only tells the backstory of every great TV theme but also examines the many neglected and frequently underrated orchestral and jazz compositions for television dating back to the late 1940s.

Covering every series genre (crime, comedy, drama, westerns, action-adventure, fantasy and sci-fi), it also looks at music for animated series, news and documentary programming, TV-movies and miniseries, and how music for television has evolved in the era of cable and streaming options. It is the most comprehensive history of television scoring ever published.

By:  
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 188mm,  Width: 256mm,  Spine: 35mm
Weight:   1g
ISBN:   9780190618308
ISBN 10:   0190618302
Pages:   480
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

"Jon Burlingame is one of the nation's leading writers on the subject of music for films and television. He writes regularly for Variety and has also written for The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, The Hollywood Reporter and Premiere magazine. He teaches film-music history at the University of Southern California, hosts the ""For Scores"" podcast, and is the author of five books including the best-selling and Deems Taylor Award-winning The Music of James Bond."

Reviews for Music for Prime Time: A History of American Television Themes and Scoring

Praise for the original edition, TV's Biggest Hits: Impeccably researched... crammed with musical facts, footnotes, biographical data - but also, lucky for us tune-deaf types, tons of juicy anecdotes about the making of our favorite tunes. * Newsday * A far richer, more intelligent book.... Burlingame has had one of those so-obvious-it's-clever ideas and did a ton of research to dig up anecdotes about the theme songs and background music that are the soundtrack to a TV watcher's life. * Entertainment Weekly * A serious, professional and comprehensive history of the songs and music that accompanied virtually every major show from Mr. Ed to The X-Files.... a required addition to any serious film or television library. * Emmy * Ranks among the essential contributions to television-music scholarship as a comprehensive, meticulously researched history that heavily relies on primary sources, whether archival documents or interviews with composers. * James Deaville, editor, Music in Television * Advance praise for this new, vastly expanded edition: A remarkable history of music in American television from its infancy to the present day. The book connects every conceivable television genre with the composers who made these shows memorable to the viewing public. In each chapter, Burlingame creates compelling historical narratives while also spinning intimate portraits of its music makers. As informative as it is entertaining, this will be an invaluable resource for television studies for years to come. * Ron Rodman, author, Tuning In: American Narrative Television Music * Part analog database, part rollicking scavenger hunt (you can find nuggets like Henry Mancini's well-timed haircut, which led to the Peter Gunn theme and essentially Mancini's subsequent career, or Yul Brynner's surprising design skills), this fast-moving survey is a rich source of quick-fix facts, large-scale historical arcs, and more than a few enticing side trails for the rest of us to explore. * Robynn J. Stilwell, co-editor, Music and the Moving Image *


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