Ben relates the journey of playing piano as part of a full orchestra live accompanying Chaplin’s City Lights under the baton of the score’s restorer, Timothy Brock, during the Silent Film Days Festival in Tromsø, Norway. Ben also explores how he experienced Chaplin’s score “from the inside” and what he learned about making music to support silent film as a result. He describes the technical difficulty of playing live accompaniment with a large group, and analyzes Chaplin’s choices of accompaniment, the structure of his melodies, matters of authentic technique and style in a 1931 score for a 1931 film, and Chaplin’s innovations in scoring at the dawn of synchronized sound.
Episode 44 Show Notes:
IntroductionHow Ben was invited to play piano and celeste with the Arctic Philharmonic playing the score of City Lights by Charles Chaplin live under the baton of Timothy Brock, music restorer and consultant to the Chaplin
estate.Timothy Brock on restoring the score of City LightsLearning to play the piano scoreStudying and learning the score leads to revelations about Chaplin’s choices in scoringExcerpt from Ben’s accompaniment for His Nibs starring Colleen Moore (1921) recorded at CapitolFest in Rome, NY on August 24, 2021 on the theater's original 1928 Möller theatre pipe
organ.How Timothy Brock kept the music in tight synchronization with the film in a live performance Use of sound effects on the film soundtrackThe agitato theme as conducted by Timothy BrockPeculiarities of the copyright deposit score (lyrics, wrong keys)The interrupted waltz as The Tramp examines the statue - turning pantomime into danceKeeping on the beat with a large orchestra, given the delay of sound wavesHow undercranking works with the synchronized musicHow the agitato motif in the boxing scene works across the rhythm of the physical movementThe City Lights score as innovative in underscoringUse of scalar melodies to avoid drawing attention to the musicExcerpt from Ben’s accompaniment to The Ploughshare (1915), an Edison/Biograph film directed by John Collins, improvised at a performance at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, NY on September 17, 2021Matters of authenticityChoke cymbalVibratoPortamentoSwingBen becomes a section by name: Strings, Brass, Percussion, “Ben”Observing the film while playing to see how Chaplin uses musicChaplin’s use of 7-bar phrase rather than the standard 8Ben sums up how Chaplin broke away from silent era scoring technique of music beds and mood cues to create genuine film underscoring as it developed in the synchronized sound
era.Sign-offs