Hollywood Sound Design and Moviesound Newsletter: A Case Study of the End of the Analog Age

Hollywood Sound Design and Moviesound Newsletter: A Case Study of the End of the Analog Age

by David Stone (Author)

Synopsis

As film students and younger fans experience Big Hollywood Sound in Imax presentations and digital theaters, many are also discovering action and adventure movies made well before they were born. There is a legacy to be enjoyed in the sound of these films: Blockbuster movies of the `80's, and `90's are notable for the extraordinarily dramatic impact of their sound mixing, and the way in which it could immerse audiences in a surrounding space. During this period, a small group of sound professionals in Hollywood wrote and published a critical journal about the craftsmanship, new technology, and changing aesthetics that excited conversation in their community. Their work has been edited and compiled here for the first time.

David Stone is a sound editor, a veteran of roughly 100 Hollywood feature films, such as Gremlins, Top Gun, Die Hard, Speed, and Ocean's 11. He was a Supervising Sound Editor for projects as varied as Predator, Edward Scissorhands, Beauty and the Beast, Batman Returns, City Slickers 2, and Dolores Claiborne. He has collected Golden Reel awards for Best Sound Editing five times, and won the 1992 Academy Award (R) for best Sound Effects Editing, for his supervising work on Bram Stoker's Dracula. In 2015, he received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the San Luis Obispo Jewish Film Festival in California. Stone is now a Professor and former Chair of Sound Design at Savannah College of Art and Design. Between 1989 and 1994, he was the editor of Moviesound Newsletter, which was published by Vanessa Ament.

Dr. Vanessa Theme Ament is the author of The Foley Grail, and a contributor to Sound: Dialogue, Music, and Effects (the Silver Screen Series). She is on the steering committee for Cinesonika, an international film festival and conference. A veteran Foley artist, sound editor, and voice actor from Los Angeles, she also writes and sings jazz, and is a member of the American Federation of Musicians, SAG-AFTRA, Actors Equity, and the Editors Guild. She worked on Die Hard, sex, lies, and videotape, Platoon, Predator, Edward Scissorhands, Beauty and the Beast, Noises Off, and A Goofy Movie, and many other films. Dr. Ament received her Ph.D. in Communication, in the area of Moving Image Studies, from Georgia State University in Atlanta, and is presently the Edmund F. and Virginia B. Ball Endowed Chair Professor of Telecommunications, at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 412
Edition: 1
Publisher: Focal Press
Published: 17 Aug 2016

ISBN 10: 1138890642
ISBN 13: 9781138890640

Media Reviews

Many believe that Apocalypse Now was the first popular film to open our ears to the possibilities presented by immersion in a listening environment. Once we transcended into the world of multi-channel distribution, many decisions had to be made, both creative and technical, that would influence how we experience the sonic world of a film. In Hollywood Sound Design and Moviesound Newsletter: A Case Study of the End of the Analog Age, David Stone and Vanessa Ament have gathered some of the great articles from Moviesound Newsletter, written by some of the seminal contributors to this creative process. This book is a must for those interested in understanding the progression of the storytelling process through the sound of a film that informs the use of film sound today.

-Peter Damski, C.A.S. (Cinema Audio Society); Emmy Award-winner for Sound Mixing for A Comedy Series or Special in 1994 and 1995, both for Mad About You

Ever since The Jazz Singer beguiled the ears and eyes of its patrons in 1927, the motion picture has been an acoustic as well as a visual art form. David E. Stone and Vanessa Theme Ament's gloriously-geeky celebration of Hollywood sound design in the predigital era belongs on the bookshelves of film students and armchair aficionados alike. Having formerly worked as a moviemaker myself, I could feel the mag film slithering through my white-gloved fingers once again as I devoured page after page of lively prose in the service of fascinating technical knowledge.

-James K. Morrow, Author, The Godhead Trilogy, The Last Witchfinder and Galapagos Regained

This book is a fountain of information. A terrific gaze back through the looking glass at those individuals who were there, in the trenches in the golden age of sound and its introduction into multi-channel sound editing, sound design and re-recording. A top shelf reference for anyone in motion picture sound right now or at any moment in the future.

-Elliot Tyson, Hollywood Re-recording Mixer, Mississippi Burning (1988), The Shawshank Redemption (1994), and The Green Mile (1989); Winner of an Academy Award for Glory (1989)

Hearing films through the perspective of these leading practitioners is like taking mini-master classes in the art of creating and listening to sound tracks. It's also a living history that documents and critiques a crucial period (late `80s through early `90s) as sound designers expanded film's aural vocabulary in revolutionary ways.

-Elisabeth Weis, Professor Emerita, Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center, CUNY, Author, The Silent Scream: Alfred Hitchcock's Sound Track, co-editor: Film Sound: Theory and Practice

Author Bio
David E. Stone is a sound editor, a veteran of roughly one hundred Hollywood feature films such as Gremlins, Top Gun, Die Hard, Speed, and Ocean's 11. He was a supervising sound editor for projects as varied as Predator, Edward Scissorhands, Beauty and the Beast, Batman Returns, City Slickers 2, and Dolores Claiborne. He has collected Golden Reel awards for Best Sound Editing five times, and won the 1992 Academy Award (R) for best Sound Effects Editing, for his supervising work on Bram Stoker's Dracula. In 2015, he received a Lifetime Achievement Award by the San Luis Obispo Jewish Film Festival in California. Stone is a now a professor and former Chair of Sound Design at Savannah College of Art and Design. Between 1989 and 1994, he was the editor of Moviesound Newsletter, which was published by Vanessa Ament. Dr. Vanessa Theme Ament is the author of The Foley Grail and a contributor to Sound: Dialogue, Music, and Effects (the Silver Screen Series). She is on the steering committee for Cinesonika, an international film festival and conference that celebrates sound and music in film and video. A veteran Foley artist, sound editor, and voice actor from Los Angeles, she also writes and sings jazz, and is a member of several industry unions, including American Federation of Musicians, SAG-AFTRA, Actors Equity, and the Editors Guild. Some of the films Dr. Ament has worked on include Die Hard, sex, lies, and videotape, Platoon, Predator, Edward Scissorhands, Beauty and the Beast, Noises Off, and A Goofy Movie. Dr. Ament received her Ph.D. in Communication, in the area of Moving Image Studies, from Georgia State University in Atlanta, and is presently the Edmund F. and Virginia B. Ball Endowed Chair Professor of Telecommunications, at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana.