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Where
Did the Music Video Come from? |
by:
Ispas
Marin |
Although
the first music video ever broadcasted was
'Video Killed the Radio Star' played by
MTV in 1981, some consider the music video
to be much older than that year. It seems
that the film Alexander Nevsky, directed
by Sergei Eisenstein in 1938 had some extended
images of battles which had been choreographed
by Sergei Prokofiev. These new scenes were
so innovative that they have lately been
considered to be the first music video.
Apparently, the music video is even much
older than these innovative scenes. The
1911 Alexander Scriabin's symphony - Prometheus:
Poem of Fire was written for orchestra and
'light organ'. Oskar Fischinger's animated
movies were considered to be other ancestors
of the music video as they were called 'visual
music' and they were equipped with orchestral
scores.
Max Fleischer's short cartoons were also
considered to be attempts of a music video.
He created a new type of cartoons, the sing-along
cartoons which he called Screen Songs. These
short cartoons were inviting the public
to sing along to famous songs at that time.
Few years later, in the 1930s, these cartoons
were changed; they displayed the musicians
singing their hit songs in front of the
camera in a live-action show.
Walt Disney also contributed to the music
video evolution through his 'Silly Symphonies'
which were based on musical pieces. The
Warner Brothers cartoons were also created
around songs. But the most popular videos
were the live music concerts, performing
popular singers, videos which were displayed
in theatres.
Bessie Smith's dramatized performance of
a song was another attempt to make a music
video. This performance consisted in a short
film named Saint Louis Blues. It was very
popular and it had been played in theatres
for more than 3 years. She wasn't the only
musician that appeared in short musical
materials. Many musicians liked the idea
and started shooting their own materials.
Music historian Donald Clarke considers
that Louis Jordan's strange feature film
Lookout is the official ancestor of the
music video.
In conclusion, it seems that the first music
video issue is still a controversial subject.
The important thing that needs to be noted
is that the music video is by far much older
than the television which made it famous:
MTV.
About the author:
For a great data base of music video codes
just visit us at http://www.videocode.org
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
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