Accustomed though we are to
speaking of the films made before 1927 as "silent", the film has never been, in the full sense of the word, silent. From the very beginning, music was regarded as an
indispensableaccompaniment; when the Lumiere films were shown at the first public film
exhibition in the United States in February 1896, they were accompanied by piano improvisations on popular tunes. At first, the music played bore no special
relationship to the films; an
accompaniment of any kind was sufficient. Within a very short time, however, the incongruity of playing lively music to a solemn film became apparent, and film pianists began to take some care in matching their pieces to the mood of the film.
As movie theaters grew in number and importance, a violinist, and perhaps a cellist, would be added to the pianist in certain cases, and in the larger movie theaters small
orchestras were formed. For a number of years the
selection of music for each film program rested entirely in the hands of the conductor or leader of the
orchestra, and very often the principal
qualification for
holding such a position was not skill or taste so much as the
ownership of a large personal library of musical pieces. Since the conductor seldom saw the films until the night before they were to be shown(if indeed, the conductor was lucky enough to see them then), the musical arrangement was
normally improvised in the greatest hurry.
To help meet this difficulty, film distributing companies started the practice of publishing suggestions for musical
accompaniments. In 1909, for example, the Edison Company began issuing with their films such indications of mood as " pleasant", "sad", "lively". The suggestions became more explicit, and so emerged the musical cue sheet containing indications of mood, the titles of suitable pieces of music, and
precise directions to show where one piece led into the next.
Certain films had music especially
composed for them. The most famous of these early special scores was that
composed and arranged for D.W Griffith's film Birth of a Nation, which was released in 1915.
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