
Music Libraries and Imagined Images
Description
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Library music is an ubiquitous yet often unquestioned presence in contemporary media. This pre-existing music is used in a wide variety of contexts, from television and film trailers to YouTube videos. Although library music was first targeted at professional audiovisual producers, the spread of digital technologies has widened this music industry's client-base to include amateur videographers and online content makers.
Drawing from qualitative interviews with composers and media producers, these actors' perspectives are woven together in order to reach an in-depth insight into library music's creation and synchronization with pictures. The book teases out the patterns and peculiarities of library music that distinguish it from other musical practices: it is cast here as usable music made for imagined images, and as a repository of shared musical imaginaries.
By exploring how library music is continuously transformed in multiple and unpredictable moments of meaning-making, we also unveil its specificity not as a finished musical work, but rather as a raw material meant to be repurposed and reshaped beyond composers' hands. Ultimately, the book reframes library music as an object worthy of attention - one that can reveal much about music for media today.
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Content
Acknowledgements
'The music industry's step-child': an introduction to library music
I. Old Habits
1. 'The importance of being usable': library music as functional music
2. 'A soundtrack to a film that doesn't exist yet': music for unknown images
3. Sleazy sax, playful pizzicato, and other clichés we live by
4. From industry to craft: composers' practices in library music
II. New Practices
5. 'Fresh, hand-picked tracks': libraries' commercial strategies
6. 'An infinite number of hobbyists': library music's new users
7. From gender reveals to pimple popping: library music and meaning-making online
8. 'Grab your knife': library music as raw material
In constant musicking: the futures of library music
References
Index
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