TITEL
Making music mean: on functions of, and knowledge about, narrative music in multimedia
FöRFATTARE
Wingstedt, Johnny
INSTITUTION
Musik och medier / Musikhögskolan
SAMMANFATTNING
Narrative media music – music used for narrative purposes in multimedia
such as film and computer games – is often, especially for young people,
the largest source of daily musical experience. This PhD thesis is based on
three articles, in different ways exploring functions of, and knowledge
about, narrative media music. The overarching research question of the
thesis is: ‘How can meaning-making functions of narrative media music be
described – and how are attitudes, awareness and knowledge about such
functions expressed through the different modes of musical sound and
speech?’
The first article discusses how the musical underscore in narrative media
achieves meaning in multimodal interplay with the visuals and other
available modes of representation. Three short film scenes are examined
from the perspectives of ideational, interpersonal and textual meanings.
Even if music in such situations usually does not attain a high degree of
conscious salience, it is clear that it often contributes meaning that is
essential for the understanding of the overall narrative. It is concluded
that what we (think we) see is often to a large degree determined by what
we hear.
The second article presents the first part of a study, where 23 young
participants (12-13 years old), using a software tool, were given the task
of adapting musical expression to make it ‘fit as well as possible’
different visual scenes shown on a computer screen. They also answered a
questionnaire, asking about their musical training and media habits.
Numerical data from the trial sessions, representing differences in musical
expression, were analyzed statistically. The results indicated a strong
degree of in-group conformity and consensus, indicating knowledge of
culturally available functions and conventions of narrative media music.
The third article describes the second part of the study. Each participant
was interviewed in a stimulated recall situation where they commented and
reflected on their own musical expressions of their completed trials. From
the analysis of the interviews, examining the verbal expression of
ideational, interpersonal and textual meanings, five different types of
statements could be discerned: the Unclear, Intuitive, Associative,
Analytical and Transformative types. These statements were also seen as
reflecting various aspects of Swanwick’s (1994) concepts of intuitive and
analytical knowledge. Combining the verbal statements with how each
participant musically had demonstrated conformity or non-conformity to
narrative conventions, contributed to a fuller and more nuanced account of
their expressed musical knowledge.
The thesis concludes with a discussion of the learning opportunities
offered by narrative multimedia in the escalating media society and of its
implications for formal music education.
ISSN 1402-1544 / ISRN LTU-DT--08/43--SE / NR 2008:43
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