Home
Chaplin's Smile: Song Arrangements for Violin & Piano
Barnes and Noble
Chaplin's Smile: Song Arrangements for Violin & Piano
Current price: $20.49
Barnes and Noble
Chaplin's Smile: Song Arrangements for Violin & Piano
Current price: $20.49
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
Is there another major movie star who composed scores for his or her own films? This aspect of
Charlie Chaplin
's work is often underestimated, with
Smile
first appearing in instrumental form in the 1936 film Modern Times and later recorded with lyrics by
Nat King Cole
and many other artists, being the example of his work that invariably comes to mind when
Chaplin
's work as a composer is mentioned. Yet a few hours' acquaintance with
's films will demonstrate the degree to which music is woven into their flow, intensifying the romantic scenes against which the slapstick plays out.
was not a trained musician; he improvised these pieces at the piano, having them notated by others. An advantage of hearing them in a group is that you get an insight into his creative process: sample
Mandolin Serenade
to hear how the improvisatory process shows up in the music. That piece, from 1957, was from
's A King in New York, and some of the pieces are even later (from the 1967 comedy A Countess from Hong Kong); his style evolves somewhat but does not fundamentally shift, and this is also interesting. Russian-American violinist
Philippe Quint
and pianist
Marta Aznavoorian
, assisted in a couple of cases by none other than
Joshua Bell
, catch the classic sentimental tone perfectly, and the whole album can be enjoyed on several different levels, from silent movie nostalgia to unique insight into
as a creative figure. ~ James Manheim
Charlie Chaplin
's work is often underestimated, with
Smile
first appearing in instrumental form in the 1936 film Modern Times and later recorded with lyrics by
Nat King Cole
and many other artists, being the example of his work that invariably comes to mind when
Chaplin
's work as a composer is mentioned. Yet a few hours' acquaintance with
's films will demonstrate the degree to which music is woven into their flow, intensifying the romantic scenes against which the slapstick plays out.
was not a trained musician; he improvised these pieces at the piano, having them notated by others. An advantage of hearing them in a group is that you get an insight into his creative process: sample
Mandolin Serenade
to hear how the improvisatory process shows up in the music. That piece, from 1957, was from
's A King in New York, and some of the pieces are even later (from the 1967 comedy A Countess from Hong Kong); his style evolves somewhat but does not fundamentally shift, and this is also interesting. Russian-American violinist
Philippe Quint
and pianist
Marta Aznavoorian
, assisted in a couple of cases by none other than
Joshua Bell
, catch the classic sentimental tone perfectly, and the whole album can be enjoyed on several different levels, from silent movie nostalgia to unique insight into
as a creative figure. ~ James Manheim