French Musical Culture and the Coming of Sound Cinema
Hannah Lewis
Reviews and Awards
"Hannah Lewis has made a hugely important contribution towards our understanding of the exciting period in the early 1930s when French filmmakers and musicians began to grasp the manifold cultural and aesthetic implications of the new synchronized sound technology." --Mervyn Cooke, Professor of Music at the University of Nottingham and author of A History of Film Music
"Unlike Hollywood, the French greeted sound cinema with a profusion of radically distinct aesthetic positions. Sound should abet cinemaâs creation of oneiric shock, theater, anti-theater, operetta, class critique, realism, poetry. Hannah Lewis shows how music figured in those exciting debates, opening pathways for new audiovisual possibility." --Claudia Gorbman, Professor Emeritus of Film Studies, University of Washington Tacoma
"Lewis's compelling book captures the excitement and trepidation with which filmmakers, composer, and critics greeted the arrival of synchronized sound film in France, correcting the film music scholarship that conflates Hollywood's transition to synchronized sound film with Europe's." --Leslie Sprout, author of The Musical Legacy of Wartime France