Abstracts
Résumé
Cet article retrace l’histoire d’une industrie musicale prolifique, mais culturellement négligée et marginalisée – celle de la library music ou musique d’illustration – dans les années 1960 et 1970. Elle interroge ses modes de production, de médiation et de circulation, examinant différents aspects et moments de créativité partagée ou relayée. Il s’agit de mettre en évidence un réseau de médiateurs, de supports, d’infrastructures, de compositeurs et de musiciens restés anonymes et invisibles. La librairie musicale pourrait être considérée comme une incarnation spécifique, mais historiquement dévalorisée, de la musique populaire – une forme que l’on pourrait qualifier de musique parallèle ou « paramusique ». Cet article se propose non seulement d’en restituer le mode de fonctionnement méconnu, mais aussi de repenser les interrelations unissant créativité, expérimentation et standardisation, originalité et emprunt, art et commerce – plus largement, il s’agit aussi de reconsidérer l’influence de ces catégories sur la formation des objets d’étude et canons de la musique populaire.
Mots-clés :
- film,
- library music,
- phonographie,
- remédiation,
- télévision
Abstract
This article retraces the history of a prolific, yet culturally neglected and marginalized music industry—that of library music of the 1960s and 1970s. It questions its modes of production, mediation, and distribution, examining different aspects and moments of shared or relayed creativity. In doing so, it highlights a network of mediators, objects, infrastructures, composers, and musicians that have hitherto remained anonymous and invisible. Library music could be viewed as a specific but historically undervalued embodiment of popular music—a form that could be described as parallel music or “paramusic.” This article aims not only to reconstruct its little-known modus operandi, but also to reconsider the ways in which creativity, experimentation and standardization, originality and borrowing, and art and commerce are interrelated. More broadly, it seeks to reassess how these categories influence the shaping of objects of study and canons within popular music.
Keywords:
- film,
- library music,
- phonography,
- remediation,
- television
Appendices
Bibliographie
- Alain (Émile-Auguste Chartier) (1934), Propos de littérature, Paris, Paul Hartmann.
- Anonyme (1974), « Radiophonics – bbc’s Box of Tricks », Music Week, 9 mars, p. 30.
- Arbo, Alessandro (2021), The Normativity of Musical Works. A Philosophical Inquiry, Leiden et Boston, Brill.
- Attali, Jacques (1977), Bruits. Essai sur l’économie politique de la musique, Paris, Presses universitaires de France.
- Bolter, Jay, et Richard Grusin (1999), Remediation. Understanding New Media, Cambridge, Massachusetts, et Londres, mit Press.
- Born, Georgina (2005), « On Musical Mediation. Ontology, Technology and Creativity », Twentieth-Century Music, vol. 2, no 1, p. 7-36, https://music.arts.uci.edu/abauer/4.3/readings/Born_Mediation.pdf.
- Born, Georgina (2009), « Afterword. Recording. From Reproduction to Representation to Remediation », dans Nicholas Cook et al. (dir.), The Cambridge Companion to Recorded Music, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, p. 286-304.
- Brend, Mark (2012), The Sound of Tomorrow. How Electronic Music Was Smuggled into the Mainstream, New York, Londres, New Delhi, Sidney, Bloomsbury Publishing.
- Briscoe, Desmond, et Roy Curtis-Bramwell (1983), bbc Radiophonic Workshop. The First Twenty-Five Years, Londres, British Broadcasting Corporation.
- Butler, David (2014), « ‘Way Out – Of This World!’. Delia Derbyshire, Doctor Who and the British Public’s Awareness of Electronic Music in the 1960s », Critical Studies in Television, vol. 9, no 1, p. 62-76, https://doi.org/10.7227/CST.9.1.5.
- Deaville, James (2011), « A Discipline Emerges. Reading Writing about Listening to Television », dans James Deaville (dir.), Music in Television. Channels of Listening, New York et Londres, Routledge, p. 7-33.
- Frith, Simon (1982), « Mood Music. An Inquiry into Narrative Film Music », Screen, vol. 25, no 3, p. 78-87.
- Griffiths, John (1995), Nimbus. Technology Serving the Arts, Londres, Andre Deutsch.
- Groys, Boris (2014), On the New, traduit de l’allemand par G. M. Goshgarian, Londres et New York, Verso.
- Guéraud-Pinet, Guylaine (2018), Musique et industries médiatiques. Construction et mutations d’une musicalisation médiatisée à la télévision (1949-2015), thèse de doctorat, Université Grenoble Alpes, https://theses.hal.science/tel-01990326/document.
- Hennion, Antoine (2003), « Music and Mediation. Towards a New Sociology of Music », dans Martin Clayton, Trevor Herbert et Richard Middleton (dir.), The Cultural Study of Music. A Critical Introduction, Londres, Routledge, p. 80-91.
- Hollander, Dave (2018), Unusual Sounds. The Hidden History of Library Music, New York, Anthology Archives.
- Huvet, Chloé (2016), « La musicologie du cinéma. Enjeux disciplinaires et problèmes méthodologiques », Intersections. Canadian Journal of Music / Revue canadienne de musique, vol. 36, no 1, p. 53-84, https://doi.org/10.7202/1043868ar.
- Johnson, Laurie (2003), Noises in the Heard or The Adventures of a Composer in the Worlds of Film, Television, Concert Hall, Theatre – and Other Strange Places, New Romney, Bank House Books.
- Kassabian, Anahid (2013), Ubiquitous Listening. Affect, Attention, and Distributed Subjectivity, Berkeley et Los Angeles, University of California Press.
- Kerridge, Adrian (2016), Tape’s Rolling, Take One! The Recording Life of Adrian Kerridge, [Hertford], M-Y Books.
- Kopytoff, Igor (1986) « The Cultural Biography of Things. Commoditization as Process », dans Arjun Appadurai (dir.), The Social Life of Things. Commodities in Cultural Perspective, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, p. 64-92.
- Lanza, Joseph (1995) Elevator Music. A Surreal History of Muzak, Easy-Listening and Other Moodsong, Londres, Quartet Books.
- Leibovitz, Frédéric (s. d.), Qu’est-ce que la « Production Music » ?, https://www.cezamemusic.com/blog/quest-ce-que-la-production-music/.
- Milburn, Kevin (2013), « Futurism and Musical Meaning in Synthesized Landscapes », Kaleidoscope, vol. 5, no 1, p. 109-116, https://openresearch.lsbu.ac.uk/item/87945.
- Morgan, Frances (2020), Electronic Music Studios London Ltd (ems), the Synthi 100 Synthesizer and the Construction of Electronic Music Histories, thèse de doctorat, Royal College of Art, Londres, https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/4730/1/FrancesMorgan-LibrarySubmission-RedactedCopy.pdf.
- Nardi, Carlo (2012), « Library Music. Technology, Copyright and Authorship », dans Salwa El- Shawan Castelo-Branco, Susana Moreno et Pedro Roxo (dir.), Issues in Music Research. Copyright, Power and Transnational Musical Processes, Lisbonne, Colibri, p. 73-83.
- Niebur, Louis (2010), Special Sound. The Creation and Legacy of the bbc Radiophonic Workshop, Oxford et New York, Oxford University Press.
- Ong, Walter (1982), Orality and Literacy. The Technologizing of the World, Londres et New York, Routledge.
- Perec, Georges (1989), L’infra-ordinaire, Paris, Seuil.
- Piekut, Benjamin (2014), « Actor-Networks in Music History. Clarifications and Critiques », Twentieth-Century Music, vol. 11, no 2, p. 191-215, https://doi.org/10.1017/S147857221400005X.
- Pinch, Trevor, et Frank Trocco (2002), Analog Days. The Invention and Impact of the Moog Synthesizer, Cambridge, Massachusetts, et Londres, Harvard University Press.
- Pixley, Andrew (2015), « Noises in the Library », Doctor Who Magazine, no 41, p. 32-37.
- Prilly, Pat (1972), Moog Expressions [notes de pochette], Paris, Montparnasse 2000 [MP26].
- Ratcliffe, Hardie (1965), « Canned Music at Boiling Point », London Evening News, 3 juin, p. 8.
- Roy, Elodie A. (2023), « Under Suspicion. Library Music and the Musicians’ Union in Britain, 1960-1978 », Popular Music, vol. 42, no 1, p. 1-19, https://doi.org/10.1017/S0261143023000053.
- Scobie, Chris (2016), « Ephemeral Music? – The “Secondary Music” Collection at the British Library », Fontes Artis Musicae, vol. 63, no 1, p 21-32, https://www.jstor.org/stable/24579390.
- Sexton, Jamie (2022), « Library Music, Sampling, and Hip-Hop », communication présentée au colloque Library Music in Audiovisual Media, Université de Leeds, 15-16 septembre.
- Spencer, Kristopher (2008), Film and Television Scores, 1950-1979. A Critical Survey by Genre, Jefferson, North Carolina, et Londres, McFarland & Company, Inc.
- Stone, Chris (1979), « ‘Canned’ Music. But Can You Tell? », Cinema Canada, décembre-janvier, p. 43-44, https://cinemacanada.athabascau.ca/index.php/cinema/article/download/2352/2401.
- Straw, Will (1999-2000), « Music as Commodity and Material Culture », Repercussions, vol. 7, no 8, p. 147-172.
- Tagg, Philip (1980), Film Music, Mood Music and Popular Music Research. Interviews, Conversations, Entretiens, Göteborg, Stencilled Papers from the Musicology Department.
- Tagg, Philip (1989), « An Anthropology of Stereotypes in tv Music? », Svensk tidskrift för musikforskning, p. 19-42, https://www.tagg.org/articles/xpdfs/tvanthro.pdf.
- Taylor, Tim D. (2012), The Sounds of Capitalism. Advertising, Music, and the Conquest of Culture, Chicago et Londres, University of Chicago Press.
- Thompson, Peter, (2012), Composer Interviews. Carey Blyton, Petersfield, Fand Music Press.
- Tiffon, Vincent (2002), « Pour une médiologie musicale », mei (Médiation et Information), no 17, p. 109-122.
- Tiffon, Vincent (2007), « L’image sonore contemporaine. Entre misère symbolique et imaginaire sonore », Apparence(s), vol. 1, https://doi.org/10.4000/apparences.73.
- Tiffon, Vincent (2011), « L’image sonore. La présence invisible », Filigrane, no 2, https://revues.mshparisnord.fr/filigrane/index.php?id=92.
- Trunk, Jonny (2016), The Music Library, Londres, fuel.
- Wissner, Reba A. (2019), « Archives and Sources for Television Music Studies. An Appraisal and Examination », American Music, vol. 37, no 4, p. 419-434, https://doi.org/10.5406/americanmusic.37.4.0419.