Miles Davis, going up: Jazz identity and visual representation found in Elevator To The Gallows
Beltran, Michael Paul
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/107778
Description
Title
Miles Davis, going up: Jazz identity and visual representation found in Elevator To The Gallows
Author(s)
Beltran, Michael Paul
Issue Date
2020
Director of Research (if dissertation) or Advisor (if thesis)
Solis, Gabriel
Doctoral Committee Chair(s)
Pugh, James
Committee Member(s)
McNeill, Charles
Tipei, Sever
Department of Study
School of Music
Discipline
Music
Degree Granting Institution
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Degree Name
A.Mus.D. (doctoral)
Keyword(s)
Miles Davis
Elevator
Gallows
jazz
improvisation
soundtrack
film
Language
en
Abstract
In 1957, legendary trumpeter Miles Davis traveled to Paris to record the soundtrack to Elevator to the Gallows. The film featured a completely improvised score, which the band recorded as they played to edited cuts of the film. Until then, scores were regularly precomposed and were not recorded in real time. Using unfamiliar compositional techniques, Davis set a new technique for jazz and film composition. The soundtrack featured minimal scoring, simple themes, and truncated chordal structures that set the groundwork for modal jazz which also contributed to Davis’s era-defining album Kind of Blue (1959). Due to the live nature of the band’s recording process, the music in Elevator to the Gallows is responsive to the film, allowing musicians to react to the screen in real time. This created unique musical moments between the musicians and the actors and a stronger assimilation with the mise en scène or the film’s general staging.
By examining several scenes in the film, along with recently re-released television footage of the session, this thesis will discuss how jazz in film is represented on screen and show the effects on Davis’s career as seen through film, television, and marketing. Recordings heard through different visual formats such as film or television can alter the music’s perception and have different effects. The analysis of these scenes will show Davis’s ability to influence our perception of the visual image and use our understanding of jazz history to create a stronger audiovisual experience for the viewer. This juxtaposition between film and television media leads to a discussion about audience, advertising, commercialism, and how jazz is sold, with Davis’s sociocultural history at the apex.
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