Hollywood Cadences
Hollywood Cadences
Hollywood Cadences
NOTE: The examples for the (text-only) PDF version of this item are available online at:
http://www.mtosmt.org/issues/mto.13.19.4/mto.13.19.4.lehman.php
KEYWORDS: film music, cadence, phrase, modulation, genre theory, Western, Caplin, Newman, Korngold, Moross,
Goldsmith, Howard, Williams, Jurassic Park
ABSTRACT: Cadences are one of the most powerful tools at a film composer’s disposal. The structure and placement of a
cadence can shape the emotional arc of a scene, accentuate narratival information, and manipulate generic expectations.
Drawing from theories of film genre and cadential definition from Altman (1999) and Caplin (2002), I explore several
cinematically significant “cadential genres”—harmonic routines arising through the convergence of independent musical
phenomena that together project a punctuative function. Through processes of attribute substitution and subtraction, a
cadential genre can adapt to shifting scoring practices and generic expectations.
I showcase four such cadential genres. The mixed plagal cadence imports transcendent harmonic associations from the
Romantic era. Phrasal “mickey mousing” arises through cadential synchronization, as shown in an analysis of Korngold’s
Robin Hood. The subtonic half cadence is strongly linked with a specific film genre: the Western. Through analysis of Jerome
Moross’s subtonic-saturated scores and subsequent adapted and abstracted usages, I show the value of the generic approach
to style-based analysis. Lastly, I inspect the chromatically modulating cadential resolution (CMCR): the strategy of initiating a
diatonic cadence in one key only for the dominant to discharge onto the tonic of a chromatically related key. Through a
variety of intrinsic and contextual traits describable by linear, transformational, and cognitive models, I explain the strong
association of CMCRs with cinematic evocations of wonderment. This is illustrated through a case study of Williams’s Jurassic
Park.
Table of Contents
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III. Definining Cadences [3.1]
IV. Cowboy Chromaticism [4.1]
IV. Chromatically Modulating Cadential Resolutions [5.1]
VI. Soaring Scoring [6.1]
[1.1] One of the fruits of film musicology’s extraordinary growth during the past decade is an increasing appreciation of the
exuberant complexity of meaning in musical multimedia. Several attempts have been made to establish broad principles for
musical meaning-making across film styles and eras, particularly for “Classical Hollywood” (roughly 1930–1960). (2) At the
same time, other, more targeted studies—several from music theorists—have striven to characterize meaning in terms more
cellular than holistic. (3) From this vantage, film music is seen as a play of particles and routines that accumulate associations
and generate expectations through various inter- and intratextual means. One such particle that has, as yet, received minimal
attention is among music’s most fundamental elements: the cadence.
[1.2] Cadences contribute to the distinctive, if difficult to pin down “film music sound.” (4) Take, for example, the symphonic
statement shown in the reduced transcription of Example 1. (5) One of the most widely played and recognized pieces of
American film music, Alfred Newman’s “Twentieth Century Fox Fanfare” was composed in 1933 for the newly formed film
studio, 20th Century Pictures. In 1953, Newman extended the fanfare with a bold cadence to celebrate the advent of
Cinemascope technology. This version continues to be heard today, and serves the same suite of functions that it did during
the birth of the studio system in the ’30s. The fanfare is part heraldic celebration of a studio, part “ballyhoo” to arrest the
viewer’s attention, and part mini-overture to formally demarcate the onset of the film. Perhaps most importantly, it is part
icon for all the desired affective states the Hollywood cinematic experience strives to evoke—glamour, escape, sentiment,
and wonder.
[1.3] Though a late addition, the CinemaScope Extension is crucial in conjuring those associations. A great deal rests on
Newman’s choice of harmonic progression: a ii 7–ii ø7–V –I modally-mixed perfect authentic cadence (PAC). With its blend
of bittersweet melodrama and intimations of the transcendent, this cadential idea possessed connotations of romantic
sentiment that were well-worn even in the 1930s; it is a sound that would have struck 1953 audiences as a throwback, as it
does today as well. (6) Newman’s gesture is a variant of a more generalized routine, the – – cadence, or more simply
“mixed cadence” (M-C). In this harmonic formula, the sixth scale degree in major drops directly from its natural to flattened
state prior to the capture of major tonic at a phrase’s end. In the “Fanfare,” G 4 in an inner voice descends through G 4 en
route to F4 ( ), producing a half-diminished supertonic and altered dominant on the way. The fanfare brings to mind what
Steven Laitz describes as the “Hollywood Cadence,” a type of plagal motion for which he cites the familiar stock melody
shown in Example 2. Laitz bases this ascription on an assumption of widespread use in modern film and commercial
repertoires, the cadence being “commonly heard in popular music of the 1920s through 1950s and in films today” (Laitz
2012, 429–30).
[1.4] Laitz’s “Hollywood Cadence” is a latter-day manifestation of the nineteenth-century harmonic proclivity for modal
inflection of the subdominant in order to suggest sentiment or sublimity. It is an inclination that courses through the works
of Schumann, Chopin, and Mendelssohn and reaches its peak with the act-concluding plagal sighs of Wagner. (7) The mixed
plagal cadence (M-PC) in Hollywood drips with a sort of harmonic nostalgia that the prolific Newman recognized and was
skillful in reproducing. (8) Studio logo themes are decisive components in establishing the sound world of a particular movie,
and—even more so—the sound world of “Classic Hollywood” with its promise of spectacle, big stars, and narratival
coherence. (9) By employing such a consciously retrospective harmonic gesture, Newman’s fanfare harkens back to an
imagined earlier experience, not only recalling, in James Buhler’s words a “‘heroic’ era of filmmaking,” but a heroic era of
film-going as well (Buhler 1996, 33). (10)
[1.5] And yet Newman’s fanfare, despite bearing that tell-tale modal inflection, does not resemble Laitz’s paradigm in all its
details and, indeed, in several of its attributes is strikingly distinct from it: note the patently un-plagal - bass, for example.
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Apt though the label may seem, Laitz overrates the prevalence of the specific cadential formula expressed in Example 2. Few
films, even from the “Golden Age” of Hollywood, feature cadences with all the characteristics embedded within the
supposed paradigm. Certainly, some classics bear the progression prominently (particularly during end scenes and credits),
such as Franz Waxman’s score to Rebecca and Erich Wolfgang Korngold’s to Captain Blood. (11) But even in a style where
Romantic over-ripeness is often a virtue rather than vice, film composers rarely recruit the mixed plagal cadence in the literal
form of Example 2, opting instead for various alternatives with family resemblances to an M-PC prototype. (12) Difficulty in
locating an exact instance of Laitz’s model in the repertoire should not lead us to abandon it. As William E. Caplin states: “A
category is not necessarily meant to reflect frequency of occurrence in a statistical sense: it is often the case that relatively few
instances in the repertory correspond identically to the complete definition of a given category” (1998, 4). It is possible for
instances to draw meaning from a conceptually significant model, even if that model is itself stylistically elusive.
[1.6]. Example 3 presents a handful of voice-leading models for “Hollywood-esque” cadences. In the “paradigmatic form,”
we see the expansion of the dissonant tritone formed by and resolving outwards to a major sixth while the melodic line
grasps upwards to . This rising melodic contour is a contravention of the downward tug of most conventional cadences.
Combined with the tritonal friction, it effectively merges the linear rhetoric of spiritual elevation with a resigned semitonal
sigh. The alternatives, meanwhile, subtract one contrapuntal element, be it bass line, melody, or inner voice, while keeping
the essential “feel” of the cadence intact. A more distantly related quartet of models subtracts all but one of the paradigm’s
lines. Newman’s fanfare conforms roughly to the outlines of the final model. Such delineation of criteria for family
resemblances between cadences suggests a way to reconcile the apparent mismatch between repertoire and model created by
Laitz’s exemplar. This mutable and definition-frustrating relationship will be a central concern of this article.
[1.7] Textbook “Hollywood Cadence” or not, the density of meaning packed into Newman’s succinct fanfare is typical of the
art of film composition. Movie scoring relies on efficient, audience-intelligible, and often heavily conventionalized
procedures. Cadences such as the M-PC count among the most powerful tools at a film composer’s disposal. The way in
which Newman’s cadence generates a swell of anticipation while asserting syntactic closure hints at how well such pithy tonal
gestures can deliver both formal and associative content. A cadence’s structure and placement may shape the emotional arc
of a scene, lend accentuation to narrative information, and even determine the genre of its film. With their ability to close off
one stage of musical discourse, cadences are uniquely well-suited to absorbing and producing meaning. And because tonal
syntax in film music tends to be significant only insofar as it operates on a surface or middle-ground level, cadences should
be among the first elements we consider when investigating matters of musical tension and emphasis in film. (13) Indeed,
many cadential routines are so well-mined by film composers that they, like Laitz’s plagal melody, sound to our ears distinctly
“cinematic” in both provenance and affect.
[1.8] In this article, I shall explore the multifarious guises and functions played by phrase ending formulae—“Hollywood
Cadences,” to broaden the purview of Laitz’s term to include all idiosyncratically cinematic cadential procedures. Example 4,
inspired by and partly adapted from Janet Schmalfeldt’s typology (1992, 10–16), provides a listing of the various (highly
blendable) cadences and abbreviations I will employ in this study. One should not take these definitions too literally, for
reasons that will soon become clear. I will also on occasion employ an arrow symbol (⇒) to draw attention to more
progressive resolutions and noteworthy post-cadential destinations. (14)
[1.9] I will argue that because they contribute formal and semantic information in standardized but variation-prone ways,
cadences should be considered essential components of a broader film analytic methodology. Cliché-prone paradigm cases,
such as the stock melody of Example 2, no doubt exist for many Hollywood cadences. Nevertheless, I will emphasize
progressive variation over rigid formal duplication by film composers, whom I view as always striving to strike the right
balance of novelty and musical legibility for their audiences. Taking a cue from modern film genre theory, this leads me to
formulate cadence-types in terms of flexible clusters of musical attributes—as “cadential genres”—rather than through firm
definitions. Throughout I will place emphasis on the variety of ways in which composers manipulate cadences to fit diverse
narratival situations and changing audience expectations.
[1.10] I will concentrate on a variety of cadential formulae of special prominence in American genre films, including
Westerns and adventure movies. My analytic focus will fall on three cadential genres of particular stylistic and rhetorical
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importance to the experience of expectation in film. (15) In Section II, I introduce the first of these: phrasal mickey-mousing, in
which the coincidence of phrase length and visual action is manipulated. A theoretical interlude in Section III will lead to a
second procedure in Section IV, the subtonic half cadence, whose production of film generic expectations will be explored.
Sections V and VI are dedicated to the chromatically modulating cadential resolution (CMCR), a pervasive but previously
unacknowledged component of many of the most stereotypically “movie-music sounding” events in film. Though examples
will be culled from several eras of Hollywood scoring practice, I will spotlight a number of cues from the singular figure of
John Williams, particularly from his score to Jurassic Park. With his symphonic scoring style and chameleonic versatility,
Williams stands as an important bridge between Classical and New Hollywood (1970s to the present) scoring idioms. By
featuring his music prominently in my analyses, I hope to ground an eclectic project with the voice of a composer very much
connected to the “Hollywood Sound” in today’s cultural imagination.
[2.1] Among film music’s many functions, the two tasks of emotional intensification and narrative reference are particularly
well realized through cadential strategies. (16) Cadences are natural funnels for expectation and its (potentially withheld)
realization. As with any musical parameterization of expectation, cadences influence the ebb and flow of tension; when
combined with image, this dynamic is lent in turn to a film sequence. Similarly manufactured is a sense of intentionality, or
musical “pointing-to,” that can direct filmgoer attention, sometimes subtly, sometimes with great stress. (17) The conceptually
simplest—albeit often most technically demanding—use of cadence in film music relies on this dual capacity for
intensification and reference. A single cadence, coinciding with a dramatic event (and its dissonant buildup generating
anticipation for that event) can be called cadential synchronization. The accumulation of tonal tension prior to resolution is an
efficient conduit for viewer expectation, providing a cue that something is going to happen at the tonal and formally
projected instant of cadential resolution. Cadential impact is enhanced by the coincidence of a film cut with cadential onset,
or, as is often the case with half cadences and elided PACs, with dominant resolution. Savvy composers therefore arrange
their cues to take advantage of the heightening effect of harmonic/visual correspondence, planning phrase rhythms
meticulously, adding or subtracting beats from regular melodic scaffolds to enable this combinatorial “pointing.”
[2.2] Two passages in Examples 5 and 6 demonstrate the versatility of cadential synchronization, while also illustrating an
important distinction for cadential analysis in general—the difference between determinate and indeterminate resolutions.
Example 5, from John Williams’s score to Jurassic Park (1993, dir. Spielberg), is the climactic cadence within the lengthy
“Jurassic Park Theme.” This melodic centerpiece of the score is organized through fairly conservative “classical” formal
functions, with 4-measure units each ending with a cadence of varying strength. In Example 5, an HC at the fourth measure
leads into the last phrase of the melody, and coincides with an archetypal Spielbergian awe-struck close up. The effect of this
cadence is magnified by the successful discharge of the dominant onto the tonic in measure 5, fulfilling the linear tug of the
climactic melodic leading-tone and contributing to a bit of tonal rhetoric—if not formal function—much like that of an
elided PAC. The following cut reveals that object of wonderment, a panoramic shot of a herd of dinosaurs. This switch in
perspective matches exactly the beginning of the next phrase, a tutti swell upon the arrival at B major.
[2.3] Williams’s phrase offers an instance of a determinate cadence: a formal unit within a theme where the telegraphed tonal
resolution (or half-resolution) occurs exactly when it should given previously established expectations of harmonic rhythm
and melodic and metrical structure. Almost all cadences within symmetrical theme structures behave this way. However,
synchronizing metrically regular melodies to specific events on screen is a difficult task, and this kind of foursquare
musical/visual correspondence is actually fairly uncommon in practice. The trickiness of lining up metrically regular themes
with pertinent visual events leads to the employment of a different tonal strategy in film music: the indeterminate cadence. This
is a formal unit, part of a theme, or quite often a transitional or sequential passage, in which a tonal resolution is strongly
projected but the point of arrival is not overdetermined by melodic/metrical/harmonic-rhythmic factors. Rather, it is
attained through a looser preparation phase, often over a pedal and/or dissonant buildup. The strategy has the quality of
delaying resolution, and has analogues in Classical/Romantic practices such as “standing on the dominant” in cadenzas and
(re)transition sections. (18)
[2.4] A celebrated instance of indeterminate cadential synchronization, partially reproduced in Example 6, occurs in Bernard
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Herrmann’s score to Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo (1958). For the climactic moment when Scotty witnesses his girlfriend Judy
fully transformed into his lost love Madeleine, Herrmann finally resolves a dominant pedal that has been held for a full fifty
seconds. At measure 8 this dominant resolves onto the A -major chord that concludes the pedal and initiates the film’s
principle C-major love theme; the immediate resolution to A 6 makes this an indeterminate evaded cadence. The “evaded”
qualifier is due to the arrival on a non-root position tonic triad, though the viewer’s foreknowledge of the theme’s standard
VI 6 opening will partially override the sense of immediate tonic denial. Intolerably deferred resolution contributes to
emotional catharsis, a fleeting release from an unbearable thanato-erotic tension that courses through film and score. (19) This
moment lacks the concatenation of linear, temporal, and thematic cues that makes the Jurassic Park cue lock so tightly to
image, and it is not a cadence in the same sense as the conventionalized, motive-liquidating phrase endings in Mozart or
Haydn are. (20) Nevertheless, indeterminate resolutions like this are often entirely cadential in rhetoric, and represent a
strategy so well-mined by film composers that Section V will be entirely devoted to a particular form of them.
[2.5] When cadential synchronization occurs repeatedly, rather than as a one-off occurrence, phrasal mickey-mousing takes place.
This is the matching of numerous discrete musical phrases with specific events onscreen. (21) With phrasal mickey-mousing,
musical units are made to correspond to film editing rhythms through manipulation of phrase tempi and durations (and,
rarely, after-the-fact edits to match precomposed score). The amplification of music’s gestural synchronization can call
additional attention to visual accents, which may explain some of phrasal mickey-mousing’s appeal to cartoon composers. In
artful instances, the spectator is invited to marvel at the dexterous combination of parameters otherwise at odds with each
other; this is especially true if determinate cadences are chiefly employed. Done with particular virtuosity by composers like
Carl Stalling and Scott Bradley, an entire scene—even of the most irreverent subject matter—can take on a “balletic” quality
thanks to the alignment of sight and sound.
[2.6] The Russian composer and film music critic Leonid Sabaneev found mickey-mousing to be a violation of music’s very
nature, inappropriate for all but “comic films and animated cartoons” (see excerpt from Sabaneev in Hubbert 2011, 217). To
Sabaneev, the approach is flawed because it requires that music “sacrifice the principles governing its form: no matter what is
happening on the screen, the music must have its melodic structures, its phrases and cadences, and it must not be asked to suffer
dilution by the rhythms and occurrences of the picture” (216; italics added). Doubtlessly, crude cadential mickey-mousing
may produce music that is incoherent outside of the context of the individual film. However, the most skillful employers of
the technique were, pace Sabaneev, perfectly capable of generating music pleasing both in and outside the film.
[2.8] The precision with which Korngold’s music fits this eventful sequence is due partly to the composer’s skill at
synchronization and partly to the absorptive nature of film, (23) through which even accidental musical events have a way of
fastening to onscreen action. (24) Nevertheless, the most structurally important cadences are also the most firmly wedded to
significant narrative events. Structure-defining cadences occur at measures 1–3 for Robin’s consent to the fight; measures
11–12 for the onset of the duel; measures 26–27 for an exchange of symmetrical blows; and measures 46–47 for the
confrontation’s conclusion. (25) The main section of fight music, starting at measure 19, can be loosely construed as a small
ternary form (measure 19=A, measure 28=B, measure 34=A 1). With this formal plan in place, elements of thematic
repetition and tonal expectation help offset Korngold’s puckish metrical unpredictability. Excepting the first and final
cadences, all are either elided ACs or half cadences, both of which end discrete musical phrases with the dominant (as
opposed to an inter-phrase dominant-to-tonic progression.) The preponderance of dominant-oriented punctuation keeps
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Korngold’s musical prose from coming to a definitive end until Robin hits the water. Sustained irresolution imparts a restless
energy to the heat of the fight. But even when sonically absent, D major’s control over the cue is affirmed by the cadences
placed at most every phrase boundary. This is a fitting tactic to combat the disruptive potential of the chromaticism that
Korngold’s excitable idiom allows casually to intrude, as in measures 30–34. Whereas a scene with more profound narratival
stakes might be suited by a less stable key scheme, here the retention of D major through these cadences matches the
relaxedly self-enclosed nature of Robin Hood’s encounter.
[3.1] Despite a dash of chromatic wanderlust, Korngold’s scoring for this Robin Hood sequence is resolutely monotonal,
comfortably in a single key throughout thanks to phrasal symmetry and steadfast cadential enforcement. Nevertheless, some
smaller moments of harmonic resolution, such as the miniature fanfares first established mid-period at measure 22, are less
strongly cadential in character, despite falling at phrase boundaries and providing moments of dominant to tonic
resolution. (26) Ultimately, the cadential weight of the event at measure 22 is less important than its interaction with screen
action; in this case, the gesture does not coincide with any unique visual event, and it acts more as one of many musical
flourishes that mimic the clashing of staves.
[3.2] How we determine what counts as a cadence, and how we sort affined cadences into categories, are nevertheless
essential questions that have provided much grist for theorists (see, for example, Dunsby 1980, Schmalfeldt 1992, Hepokoski
and Darcy 2006, Mirka 2009, and Nobile 2012). Noting the wide and disparate array of definitions for the term “cadence”
across theory textbooks, Ann Blombach proposes a comprehensive definition to authoritatively determine what comprises
this fundamental piece of musical vocabulary: “A cadence is any musical element or combination of musical elements,
including silence, that indicates relative relaxation or relative conclusion in music” (Blombach 1987, 231). Blombach’s
definition possesses repertoire-independent broadness and admirable clarity (eschewing, for example, the common trap of
circular reliance on the related notion of “phrase”). Yet it does not distinguish merely tension-relaxing musical events from
more form-generative phrase-ending ones; Blombach’s definition can draw no distinction between the effects of a perfect
authentic cadence and, say, an intraphrasal V ⇒I 6.
[3.3] Caplin (2004) follows up Blombach’s endeavor of cadence-clarification, not by offering a synthetic definition, but rather
by proposing a number of qualifications that specify what a cadence does, where it falls, and what conditions are necessary
for its realization. Those criteria include the obligatory presence of a root position V chord and the closing-off of a formal
musical unit. Caplin’s conditions are rigid, ruling out some phenomena (notably plagal codettas) for not fulfilling actual
cadential form or function. (27) This strictness is justified by the intended application of Caplin’s criteria to the heavily
conventionalized musical syntax of the Classical period. Yet beyond the benefit of corpus-specificity, Caplin suggests a more
philosophical rationale for stringency:
To be sure, we might ask why it is necessary to circumscribe the notion of cadence in the ways I have
proposed. Why not let it remain a looser, more flexible concept, so as better to embrace a multiplicity of
phenomena? I would counter that whereas open-ended definitions may give the impression of inclusiveness,
they actually result in blurring distinctions that truly matter. By limiting the concept of cadence, the intent is
not to shut out our perception of varying phenomena, but rather to encourage us to be more precise about
how phenomena that seem similar in some respects can actually be experienced as aesthetically different.
(Caplin 2004, 59–60)
Caplin’s preference for limitation is meant to ensure that musical phenomena with fundamentally different characters are not
inappropriately lumped together merely because they appear to serve similar purposes (namely, of projecting closure and
tension-release). The narrowness of his stipulations is fitting for the rule-bound style of Classical era music, even where they
mandate elimination of events such as plagal cadences. Despite its attractions, however, such conceptual rigidity does not
entirely befit the analysis of music for film. (28)
[3.4] Cinema scores comprise a repertoire of profoundly greater tonal and formal eclecticism than that of the Classical style.
The stylistically heterogeneous and intrinsically programmatic repertoire lacks a central normative harmonic idiom (and
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attendant constraints on cadential syntax) and can rarely rely on a set of architectural paradigms like sonata form to regulate
phrases, tonal design, essential structural closure, and so on. It is therefore often the case that the expressive demands of film
place highest emphasis on cadential rhetoric, not syntax. Caplin distinguishes rhetoric from form-functional syntax (which
exclusively determines the identity of a cadence for him), defining the former as the “unique compositional realization
entailing the entire range of musical parameters, including rhythm, meter, texture, intensity, and instrumentation” (Caplin
2004, 107). Though capable of lending formal sense to a sequence, the power of a cadence within a film is not primarily to
erect a syntactical edifice to prop up a cue; rather it is to grant an expressive quality to the scene, such as the production and
release of anxiety or the cessation of momentum. (29)
[3.5] This does not entail that syntactical features of cadences—even Caplinesque “Classical” ones—are absent in film scores.
Korngold’s Robin Hood cue is remarkable in its accommodation of cadential syntax within its metrically irregular, fight-
choreography determined musical prose. (30) For scores written in a less fastidiously synchronized manner, the local
occurrence of cadences may have nothing to do with intentionally “pointed-up” visual events, arising instead from the
inherent tonal patterns of antecedent/consequent structures. (31) Nevertheless, even incidentally placed cadences
manufacture points of tension or closure. They can, for example, convey a continuous musical thought that effectively
stitches a series of disconnected images into a coherent sequence. In such cases, the rhetorical effect of non-synchronized
cadences is simply placed at a remove from the instantaneous musico-visual surface on which phrasal mickey-mousing
operates. Korngold’s mêlée music, it is clear, entrusts its expressive effect to both the immediate impact of the cadential
moment, and to the long-accustomed expectations built around the structure of tonal phrases.
[3.6] In some ways, these recognizable but non-prescriptively enforced cinema cadences resemble an Ur-concept of film
criticism: genre. Genres such as “Western” or “noir” serve to structure narrative and guide expectations through every stage
of a film’s existence, from production to marketing, and at both inter- and intra-textual levels of reception. Modern genre
theory moves away from treating genres as stable transhistorical categories, instead considering genre-as-process and the
element of discursive participation in their generation. Film theorist Rick Altman’s influential monograph Film/Genre signaled
this change towards a more dynamic view. Genres, for Altman “are not just post facto categories, but part of a constant
category-splitting/category-creating dialectic” (2011, 65). Drawing on Ludwig Wittgenstein’s notion of family resemblances,
a “complicated network of similarities overlapping and criss-crossing,” (32) Altman argues that genre is inherently unstable:
A fundamental problem of genre studies stems from the ever-present desire for a stable and easily identifiable
object of analysis. . . . We do better, I suggest, to treat genre as a complex situation—a concatenated series of
events regularly repeated according to a recognizable pattern. . . . Traditional genre criticism has tended to
treat a single aspect of this process [of producing and disseminating texts] as representative of the whole
situation. Yet no isolated part of this process actually is the genre; instead, the genre lies somewhere in the
overall circulation of meaning constitutive of the process. . . . a genre must be defined in a manner consistent
with the complexity of an overall situation made up of three-dimensional events spread out over space and
time. (2011, 84)
Altman’s critique of the then prevailing steady-state ontology of genre can be applied to cadences, which similarly resist
transhistorical definitions in the context of film scoring. With Altman’s notion of “a concatenated series of events regularly
repeated according to a recognizable pattern” in mind, I propose a system for characterizing cadences in film music: that of
cadential genres.
[3.7] These genres are inspired by Caplin’s lists of cadential criteria, but they lack the prescriptive force intended for the
regulated Common Practice idiom. Instead of a single firm definition, ill-suited to the multiplicity of styles of film music, I
characterize cadential genres as convergences of independent musical attributes throughout shifting scoring practices and
audience expectations. Cadential genres in film are best formulated in terms of paradigm cases and attributes. A paradigm case
contains each and every of those independent attributes, and can be thought of as the transhistorical “source” of one
Hollywood cadential routine or another. (33) However, this paradigm is a construct, abstracted out of the family resemblances
of numerous cadences for which I have observed certain “recognizable patterns” repeated through practice. (34) Many other
examples that bear resemblance to the exemplar may partake of only some of the attributes, while remaining in an important
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sense outgrowths of the underlying paradigm. Caplin’s “blurring of distinctions” is thus strategically built into my model. I
list attributes within the constellation of a certain cadential type (which include both pitch- and non-pitch-based criteria) in a
rough hierarchical order, with the first qualities being the most structurally and rhetorically salient. Nevertheless, I do not
wish to overrate the importance of the orderedness of any list; the arrangement is based on an informal judgment of relative
pertinence, and other listeners may rank differently.
[3.8] The advantage of this attribute-over-definition approach is the insurance that no one aspect (nor, indeed, no group of
aspects) are taken to be intrinsic. A cadence featuring some, but not all, attributes, will still have the formal and affective
qualities of the original cadential genre. This flexibility is a boon to film composers who seek audience-intelligible musical
topics without resorting to clichéd reiterations of the same paradigm (ideally). Subtraction of one or more attributes opens
up the door for variants, adaptations, and even distantly related abstractions of the paradigm case cadence. It is because
traditional cadences are such highly regulated components of musical discourse that desirable expressive qualities such as
markedness and associativity can so easily emerge from the alteration of their paradigmatic forms. (35) Just as modern film
theory emphasizes the mutability of genre, so too this music-analytical approach aims to draw our attention to strategic
transformations of fuzzy paradigms, not rote reproduction of a platonic cadential form.
[4.1] The cadence’s capacity to index film genre is as potent as its ability to punctuate and structure dramatic action. The
power of cadential associativity can be observed in the reliance of a genre such as the Western on a small class of continually
employed cadential gestures. Conventions of style and plot have informed, and in many cases outright determined, the
makeup of the Hollywood Western throughout its cinematic evolution. (37) Through the many Western subgeneric guises
(“A,” “B,” “spaghetti,” “revisionist,” etc.), a host of expectations—comprising an attribute inventory, in fact—remain in play.
These include conventions of narrative (e.g., “sheriff cleans up lawless township”), setting (e.g., the Mexican-American
border, a saloon), dramatis personae (e.g., “ruthless cattle baron”), and scoring. (38) Musically, the genre has always been
marked by standardized (and occasionally vulgar) style topics pertaining to cowboys and Indians, often drawing from
country-and-western music or adapted/invented folksong (see Kalinak 2007, 1–17). Pentatonicism, in particular, has long
infused the Western musical landscape—including cadences, with characteristic melodic touches like approached by
instead of . (39) Today, however, pentatonicism does not hold the status of singularly preferred harmonic idiom that it
enjoyed from the 1920s through ’40s. Since the 1950s, another option became popular for Hollywood composers, one that
involved the integration of these earlier Western topics with syncopated, brass-heavy, open-fifth saturated “Americana”
music, generally ascribed to the influence of Aaron Copland, and to a lesser extent Virgil Thompson and Roy Harris. (40) This
too had ramifications for cadential structure. (41)
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[4.2] The most conspicuously prevalent “Cowboy” cadential genre takes root at the same time as the Coplandesque
influences set in the late 1950s: the subtonic half cadence (S-HC). (42) The feature of highest salience in this routine is the
insertion of the non-diatonic bass pitch before the dominant. Example 9 presents the linear paradigm for the S-HC. The
trace of the mixolydian scale—the strongest link to Copland’s Americana style—is present in its exemplars, often bearing
in both outer voices. However, the flattened leading tone often manifests in an inner-voice while the melody retains across
the half cadence. The is harmonized by a VII chord, which proceeds to the dominant with a minor third progression.
Thus, the progression is not purely mixolydian, but indulges a richer sort of “cowboy chromaticism”—nicely summarized by
the neo-Riemannian compound RP. (43) This compound accounts for the transference from VII to V (R shifts to ) and
the hasty neutralization of the diatonically foreign pitch (P neutralizes to the proper, stepwise-resolving leading tone
). (44)
[4.3] As a component of an HC, VII tends to occur near the conclusion of the antecedent phrase of a thematic period. By
contrast, the authentic cadence that closes the consequent phrase rarely partakes of the same dominant-preparing VII,
featuring a more traditional predominant (e.g., ii 7, IV, or I 6). Such phrase-functional specificity has its associative advantages.
In order to be an unambiguous marker of genre, the subtonic half cadence works best as a special and narrowly employed
routine, a case of an extraordinarily determinate cadential function. The sequestration of the subtonic to a unique moment in a
period melody heightens its distinctiveness, and thus its associative adhesiveness. Example 10 provides an attribute
inventory for the cadential genre in its most well-known thematic guises—a number of which I will now investigate.
[4.4] Several musicologists have noted the prevalence of the subtonic half cadence in Western film scores, though they do so
typically without discussing its role within a larger period structure. (45) The advent of this new “Cowboy Cadence” is
customarily attributed to Jerome Moross, and his influential and film-musicologically canonized score to William Wyler’s The
Big Country (1958) in particular. (46) Scattered precedents can be found in other sources, including Moross’s earlier score to
The Proud Rebel (1958), Hugo Friedhofer’s scores to The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) and Hondo (1953), and Gene de Paul and
Alexander Courage’s score for the film musical Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954). (47) But the gesture is overwhelmingly
Moross’s signature, used pervasively (if with considerable manipulation and adjustment) in his compositions for both concert
and film. And the most famous and likely formative employment is in his main title to The Big Country. The opening 39
measures are given in Example 11.
[4.5] The famously vigorous credits sequence features the VII–V in two contexts. (48) The motion is first heard as a
detached harmonic motive during the title’s opening fanfare, where it acts as a mini-auxiliary cadence into C major. A
distinctive linear feature here is the accented dissonance – over the chord root (measure 2), creating a tritone against
the bass with slight Lydian flavor, even as the overall modal impression is of mixolydian borrowing. – is later integrated
into the film’s motto theme as a half cadence to close off its antecedent phrase (measures 22–25) and contrasting middle
section (measures 36–39). All usages support a retained melodic , with the characteristic – motion occurring in an
inner voice.
[4.6] The Big Country’s main title demonstrates that while liquidation of the mixolydian subtonic drives the half cadence itself,
it is introduced as a fresh element, not strongly presaged by previous tonal information. Moross’s subtonics result from
(a) dovetailing fifth progressions or (b) dovetailing third progressions. In measures 1–4, the producing motion IV– VII
mirrors an implied I–IV that gets the harmonic wheel spinning, and thereby doubles the flatward plagal and strongly
folk-associated T 5 (transposition up five semitones). VII thus serves not only as a chromatic preparation of the dominant,
but also as an extension of the flat-side purview of IV. The true S-HC at measure 24 is preceded by a V/V chord. This
produces a chain of chromatic mediants [E 7–C–A 7] that arpeggiate the minor dominant. Example 12 shows the basis of
this progression, with attendant transformations for idealized triadic motions. With both these origins, VII is the product of
a localized harmonic pattern with a strong associative profile. For the subdominant-spawned subtonics, the expressive effect
rests on the magnified pastoral/agrarian undertone of plagal material. For the third-chained subtonics, the invigorating and
surprising character of a chromatic transformation lies in an unexpectedly form-functional location. (49)
[4.7] After Moross’s The Big Country, the subtonic half cadence becomes the quintessential harmonic gesture of the American
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Western film. The usage in Elmer Bernstein’s heroic theme to The Magnificent Seven (1960, dir. Sturges) (Example 13) is
similarly iconic—perhaps because of its cooption by Marlboro for their TV ad campaigns of the 1960s (see Slotkin 2010,
211). Bernstein’s rousing theme solidified the “Coplandesque” trend in Western scoring initiated by The Big Country. In short
order, the S-HC became a harmonic default for bright, optimistic Western themes, such that movies that bear major
melodies but lack the S-HC sound as though they come from an earlier era of film scoring. The gesture is such a hallmark of
the Westerns of the ‘50s and ‘60s that its presence is de rigueur for films that parodize that genre, such as Blazing Saddles
(1974), City Slickers (1991), and Der Schuh des Manitu (2001). Example 14 provides a list of media that employ the S-HC.
Special note is made when the gesture appears in a film’s genre-staking main title/opening credits. With the exception of the
1980s (which witnessed a temporary decline of film Westerns), the persistent use of the S-HC attests to its attractiveness to
composers and generic legibility to listeners.
[4.8] Most of the examples listed in Example 14 adhere directly to the half-cadential paradigm established by The Big Country.
However, numerous variants and allusions are also included that stray from pure paradigmatic usage. Even in Big Country, we
find notable manipulations of the mode-mixing logic behind the cadence. In the “Main Title,” Moross mirrors the
pre-cadential chromaticism of VII–V at several moments with an alternative harmonization of – , via III to V. The
altered paradigm, a flat mediant half cadence (FM-HC), is shown in Example 15, and is realized or alluded to in the Big
Country “Title” at measures 7, 11, and 25. III in major is less characteristic of the Western than the subtonic, but serves an
analogous function. (50) With this variant, the cadence installs an arpeggiation of the minor tonic, with chromatic mediant
relationships now in place between both chords that flank the flattened mediant. Moross puts both VII–V and III–V to
good use in a theme derived from the Big Country’s opening fanfare; this idea, shown in Example 16, accompanies scenes of
a heavily armed posse galloping through the desert. The mediant-to-dominant cadence voids the number one attribute of the
S-HC inventory (as well as attributes 5 and 12). Yet, in the case of Big Country’s riding music, the swerve from D to F is
clearly a permutation of the initial A –F, and sufficient attributes of the paradigm are present to preserve the generic
“Western” aspect of the melody.
[4.9] Adaptation of the S-HC often involves manipulating or substituting the dominant. (51) The Magnificent Seven’s theme is
already something of an atypical example if The Big Country is taken as norm: note the alteration of attribute 4 by the inclusion
of an A /B chord. Jerry Goldsmith is among the composers who reliably adapted the subtonic half cadence in creative ways
throughout his scores for Westerns in the 1960s and ’70s. His theme to 100 Rifles (1966, dir. Gries), shown in Example 17,
contains no paradigm-adhering instance of the S-HC cadential genre but several cunning permutations. Sandwiched within
the overall key of D aeolian, the theme’s mariachi-tinted B section begins what appears to be a new period melody in B
major. Goldsmith feints at an S-HC at measure 5 of the section by landing on A . But it is the minor dominant, F minor, that
follows, and two beats too late to be heard as a half cadence. The increasing prevalence of chromatic chords and the sped-up
harmonic rhythm that attends F minor loosens the grip of B major, and culminates in a re-modulation to the original key of
D. This is achieved, remarkably, by a recursive application of the subtonic to dominant progression, proceeding through
three minor thirds: first from E to C6 ( VII–V/F), then from C to A ( VII–V/d), and finally landing with a PAC back in
the home key. In the process, all but attributes 1–4, 8–9, and 15 are subtracted, with the removal of 6 (non-modularity) being
particularly remarkable as it amounts to dismantling the period structure seen in all previous examples. Nevertheless, the
repetition of the S-HC progression recoups any associative shortfall from the paradigm’s heavy alteration. (52) The iterated
application doubles the bright affect attendant with the plucky neutralization of , prevailing against the digressive forces of
chromatic inertia. The vast distances traversed by Goldsmith’s theme suggest a wide tonal landscape every bit as generically
appropriate as the broad horn melodies and expansive P4/P5-laden chord voicing more traditionally linked with the Western
sound.
[4.10] In contemporary cinema, a common adaptive strategy involves substituting IV for V within the VII–V pair of the
S-HC, necessitating a change of attributes 2–5 and 11. This procedure seems to begin around John Barry’s score to Dances
with Wolves (1992, in the cues “Ride to Fort Sedgwick” and “Buffalo Hunt”) and can be heard in themes for Mychael Danna’s
Ride with the Devil (1999) and James Newton Howard’s Wyatt Earp (1994) and Hidalgo (2004); indeed, today it may have
reached the status of independent cadential archetype, a “subtonic plagal cadence” (S-PC). (53) The main theme to
Hidalgo—used to accompany panoramic shots of the American west—is noteworthy for integrating the subdominant in place
of the traditional dominant. Howard’s theme is shown in Example 18. The transcription provides three optional
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continuation phrases that are employed on different occasions to conclude the same sentential presentation. The melody’s
first four measures crane gradually to , enabling retention of at the moment of the subtonic plagal/half cadences. The
delayed resolution of F 4 to G4 produces the same tritonal dissonance against C that was a distinctive feature of the
cadence’s paradigm. But here it serves as an accented passing tone up to rather than down to . The theme’s endings are no
less redolent of the Cowboy-cadence constellation. The first and third endings share the interphrasal iii– III motion
distinctive of the riding theme from Big Country. (54) The second ending’s final two bars hint at an expanded S-PC with an
interpolated G ma7, sandwiched between C and the half-cadential A. The third ending offers a genuine cadence to the tonic,
with the flat mediant again serving as predominant. But it does so without the aid of the dominant, opting instead for the
pure VII–I motion of an unvarnished mixolydian mode.
[4.11] The adaptability of the S-HC allows it to be realized not only in a variety of modified musical contexts, but also in
films that transform Western genre conventions or share associative traits with it. One such transformation is the negation of
attribute 2, allowing for subtonic authentic cadences. This adaptation seems capable of encoding a combination of
Americana and ethnic Irishness in the historical thriller JFK (Williams 1992, with a ii– VII–V–I), as well as in the sports
drama Rudy (Goldsmith 1993, with a I– VII–V–I). (55) In these cases, any reference to gunslingers or the frontier spirit is
absent. Even so, an associative residue remains, a suggestion of “American-ness” and “mixolydian ethnic-ness” that
contributes to a connotatively apt progression. (56) That Williams and Goldsmith also wrote numerous “pure” Westerns using
that progression is relevant, as it suggests an at least unconscious intra-oeuvre influence. Such connections depend as much
on familiarity with Western harmonic conventions as on the selective tapping from a wider pool of “modal Americana” that
happens to host both Cowboy cadences and their permutations.
[4.12] Films that blend the Western with other genres are fertile sites for adapted Cowboy cadences. Though the presence of
advanced technology and an interstellar setting marks Star Wars (1977, dir. Lucas) first as a science-fiction movie, its narrative
and iconography partake from elements of swashbuckling adventure, Japanese historical action, war drama, and Western
genres. Indeed, Star Wars is cited as frequently as a “space western” as it is other mixed genres (like “space opera”; see Brode
2012, 1–12). John Williams’s symphonic score is idiomatically eclectic, mixing musical styles in a fashion that such
intermingling of genres would demand. Though he eschews outright nods to classic Western scores, Williams does
incorporate an unambiguous S-HC in the film’s title sequence, as part of its famous main theme, shown in Example 19. The
heraldic melody has generally been linked to the idiom of Korngold (particularly the Kings Row theme it superficially
resembles; see Lerner 2001, 99–100), but the presence of an S-HC also connects it to the classic Western, with its brash
energy and larger-than-life heroes.
[4.13] Williams’s use of the S-HC, already a borrowed gesture from another genre, is itself detached within the Star Wars
score to become an independent leitmotif. The “Rebel Fanfare,” which attaches to the series’ protagonists, distills the
chromatic half cadence down to an underlying minor third transformation (an oscillatory T 9 followed by T 3 of root position
triads). As the hexalogy progresses, that short leitmotif is further abbreviated into thoroughly abstracted rhythmic or
harmonic allusions—a long way from the “Main Title” theme that first hosted the subtonic cadence, and further still from
the Moross/Bernstein model that standardized its intertextual usage in big-budget genre films. Yet in an occurrence such as
that shown in Example 20, one may hear vestiges of the same harmonic verve that infused The Big Country.
[4.14] This tiny moment from the long action setpiece “The Battle of Coruscant” in Episode III: Revenge of the Sith (2005), is
called “Get ‘Em R2!” Williams’s variation of the Rebel motif here approximates an absolute progression—recursively applied
T 3 s that drive the fanfare up three-fourths of an octatonic cycle from A to E major. The motivic transformation
accompanies the droid R2D2’s moment of glory. It does not attempt to project a cadence in any traditional sense, and
indeed, the rhetorical attributes 15–18 are wholly absent. Nevertheless, the overall T 9 s fulfill something of the cadence’s
phrase-formal role, particularly its punctuative capacity. The modified “Rebel Fanfare” first concludes one tonal region (the
mounting pressure of F-phrygian of the first notated measure, and much preceding), calling a close to one narrative stage of
the space battle. During its duration, the E-natural pedal beneath the bookend A-major chords gives off residual hints of a
cadential in A major. Like a cadenza within a concerto movement, we pause with expectancy as R2 performs, soloistically, a
feat of virtuosic robotic derring-do. The two “Rebel Fanfare” derived measures finally serve to initiate, by way of their new
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triadic orientation, the chaotic buzz of another region (initiated by an F-“rooted” {0348}), signaling the hectic conclusion of
the dog-fighting sequence. Through a long evolution involving cadential subtraction, alteration, and at this stage veritable
abstraction, the mixolydian sounds of the prairie can be heard faintly echoing in the chromaticism of this space battle.
[5.1] Many of Hollywood’s musical conventions can be traced back to the prolific pen of Max Steiner, active in the industry
from 1929 until his death in 1971. Steiner’s claim that “there is nothing more effective in motion-picture music than sudden
changes of mood cleverly handled” could well be his compositional motto, given the preponderance and variety of musical
gear-shifts in his dramatic scoring (Steiner [1937] 2011, 225). Cadential synchronization is an especially favored Steinerism.
Consider the triumphal conclusion of his score to the noir Key Largo (1948), whose final forty seconds worth of music is
organized into a small binary form, reproduced in Example 21. As is typical of these sorts of succinct endings, Steiner pulls
off confirmation and quick re-confirmation of the tonic: first with a PAC (measures 15–16), then with a more rhetorical
ii ø –I motion (measures 17–19).
[5.2] The plagal tag recalls a common variant of the paradigm introduced at the beginning of the article (an M-PC without
the component). But rather than focusing on the final cadence’s subdominant orientation, let us consider an aspect of the
gesture (and the larger cue it occupies) that is more uniquely characteristic of Hollywood tonal syntax: the coupling of a
rising melodic trichord (e.g., – – ) and chromaticism within a major-mode context. The overall key scheme of this
excerpt—C major sandwiching E major—is enabled by two forceful cadences. Between measures 8 and 9, a cadence (locally
PAC, globally HC) to a tonicized G is followed by an unmediated modulation to E , without the aid of emphasized common
tones or linear continuity from melodic G4 to B 4. This tonal shift accompanies a cut away from the heroine (Lauren Bacall)
staring out to sea to a shot of the object of her pensive gaze: the hero (Humphrey Bogart), whose motorboat now returns
ashore after a harrowing confrontation with seafaring mobsters. After dwelling in E , Steiner initiates a second modulatory
gambit to recover the cue’s nominal home key. A series of nearly identical cadential motions resolve first to E in measures
13 and 14, and then to C major at measure 15. Unlike the first modulation, this recapture of C is accomplished with linear
continuity, using the same stepwise melodic motive E 5–F4–G5, first to confirm E , then C major. The vital enabling
property of this cadential switch is the reinterpretation of the melodic tone G as /C instead of /E . What was a diatonic
authentic cadence in one key becomes a Picardy-aeolian cadence ( VI– VII–I) in another.
[5.3] Example 22 presents a foreground sketch of the conclusion of this cue that highlights the tonal rupture with the shift
to and from E . It also introduces notation for the resolutions so brashly denied with these modulations: a supplementary
staff is attached beneath the main bass-line, a substratum of unrealized harmonic implication, with arrows indicating where
Steiner’s cadences would have gone had their resolutions matched their preparations. Wavy beams in the main system connect
dominants to their surprise destinations. These two moments in Key Largo provide instances of a category of tonal motion
that straddles the line between cadence and modulation: the chromatically modulating cadential resolution (CMCR). Such occasions
of instant harmonic realignment are common in symphonic film music, and in certain guises musical theater and popular
music. (57) Often, but not always associated with cadential synchronization, CMCRs are a favorite form of “sudden change,
cleverly handled.” The preparation phase of a CMCR features the initiation of a properly behaving diatonic cadence,
including determinate and indeterminate varieties; very often, it contains implications of both HC and AC function, falling at
the end of a buildup while elided in some manner with the to-be-captured tonic. The modulation phase sees the penultimate
chord discharge not onto the expected tonic but to a root-position triad that stands in a chromatic relationship to the
anticipated destination. This triad is treated as a new tonic, and may initiate a new phrase securely within its own new
diatonic purview, as is the case with the restatement of the Key Largo’s hymn theme at measure 9 after the CMCR into E ,
and in the concluding phrase in C after the CMCR out of E at measure 15.
[5.4] An attribute inventory for the chromatically modulating cadential genre is furnished in Example 23. The presence of a
chromatic root motion between cadential and resolution chords (attribute 1) is the inventory’s most important component.
But despite the salience of pitch, I include a greater number of non-pitch attributes compared to previous inventories; this is
to reflect the exceptional emphasis composers place on the forces of musical rhetoric for these harmonic swerves. Cinematic
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CMCRs tend to adhere to a predictable profile, in their musical structure as well as the affective trajectory they install for
their film. Like more conventional, non-modulating cadences, they are often found at the conclusion of a thematic unit’s
consequent phrase, particularly in cases where that phrase’s last bars are stretched out by various resolution-stalling
techniques, such as pedal points or repetition. Other musical parameters capable of magnifying tension (and thereby
promising resolution) such as register, dynamics, and orchestration density are frequently increased on the pre-modulatory
end of the CMCR. Concurrently, these same factors are likely to change once the cadential downbeat of the new chromatic
key occurs. The tonal destination of the chromatic cadence is radically distinct from its preceding key, and composers tend to
reinforce this freshness rather than undermine it with misplaced continuities of texture or volume.
[5.5] The final modulation in Key Largo demonstrates a strategy composers can use to draw continuity between the two
distantly related harmonic stations on either side of the cadence: an ascending cadential – or – line. Both of these
subvert the typical downwards-to- tendency for cadential melodies, and therefore betray a distant kinship with the M-PC.
Example 24 provides contrapuntal models for six of the basic dominant to tonic CMCRs, all of which involve two major
mode tonics. (58) The underlying diatonic cadential model they deviate from is also indicated, along with the standard
deceptive cadence, which in certain special cases can behave as a modulating cadence. While I use ascending trichords in all
these paradigms, it should be noted that CMCRs, perhaps moreso than other genres we have explored, come in diverse
guises in their melodic figurations, and melodic continuity is often intentionally sacrificed to maximize that useful quality of
extreme disjunction. Nevertheless, sorting by trichords does help delineate different families by shared potential linear
patterns. The top row makes use of the – – line of the mixed plagal cadence while inflecting or enharmonically
reinterpreting as a triadic pitch of the new tonic; as a result, they create chromatic third relations between the dominant of
the first key and tonic of resolution. By contrast, the – – lines of the bottom row generate stepwise or tritonal relations
between cadential chords, and require sharp inflection of the final note (otherwise, the final chord would be a
non-modulatory sounding diatonic chord, either IV or vi). In cases that conform to these contrapuntal models, the upward
linear drive fulfills a function of expansion and intensification, rather than termination and relaxation. It is, in the hands of
film composers, a harmonic device that strives for new musical vistas, turning away from tonal destinations already
vouchsafed by previous diatonic syntax. (59)
[5.6] While some of the CMCRs involve common-tone retention between the chromatic chord of resolution and either the
preceding dominant or the tonic it displaces, such parsimonious characteristics are not an intrinsic feature of these motions.
Indeed, a small measure of voice-leading continuity might run counter to the desired aesthetic of the CMCR, particularly if a
retained tone is highlighted by the melody. The surprising impact of these resolutions is maximized by lowering the degree of
continuity between regions, while optionally facilitating linear “lead in” through predictably behaving upwards scalar lines
rather than held-over pitches. It is useful to think of these modulations in terms of transformations of an underlying diatonic
progression. Example 25 reconfigures the CMCRs into transformation networks, and measures their idealized voice-leading
properties through the neo-Riemannian operators. (60) A “Type” descriptor differentiates CMCRs by these root motions.
Once again, the two conventional models (Authentic and Deceptive) are also shown to draw contrast with the modulatory
alternatives. Each three-node network shows the relation of the tonic to the new tonic, dominant to expected tonic (always
RL, or DOM), and dominant to new tonic. Note that the to line CMCRs require more semi-tonal displacements to reach
their chromatic destinations, and they necessitate chromatic alteration of the tonic scale degree; this commends them to
scenes of more intense mood-reorientation.
[5.7] When combined with image, a successful chromatically modulating cadential resolution can amplify, or in many cases
generate, a sensation of wonderment. I define the wonderment sensation as a highly pleasurable combination of two forms
of musical surprise, awe and frisson, both of which David Huron characterizes as aesthetic rechanneling of fear responses. (61)
The former corresponds with the feeling of having one’s breath taken away by a sustained violation of expectations, while
the latter captures the innervation produced by a more abrupt and unanticipated event. Huron notes that the frisson
response, which is manifested in strong emotional and physiological indicators like shivers and chills, has been found to be
correlated with “sudden changes of harmony and with abrupt changes in dynamic level” (Huron 2006, 281–83)—exactly the
stuff of a CMCR. (62) Wonder involves both awe and frisson because the instantaneous modulation may be a brief surprise
(hence frisson), but the musical “pulling back” so often accomplished by these cadences leads to sustained, more expansive
passages in the new key (hence awe). (63)
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[5.8] The interplay of awe and frisson in a CMCR is accomplished by a frustration of local structural tonal expectations and a
deeper satisfaction of rhetorical cadential expectations. As tension accumulates in the dominant, an increasingly inevitable
implication of soon-to-arrive harmonic closure is produced. This telegraphed need for release in turn affects the image,
planting the expectation for a dramatic change either in tone or in content, such as would be realized by an editorial cut or
pan to a new subject of visual focus. With the appropriate degree of anxiety or pregnancy lent to the image, the moment of
cadential discharge can occur. The resulting chromatic swerve generates a combination of surprise and release. The shivers-
inducing surprise is the product of structural tonal expectations, which predict, even in the chromatic idiom of many film
composers, that dominants proceed to their implied tonics; the destinations of most CMCR types are fundamentally
unpredictable from the logic of diatonic functionality. The element of release, on the other hand, arises from letting go of the
intensified dominant and settling on a consonant major triad. Increased novelty infuses the image, as does added scope and
breadth. (64) When the strange new destination is fully accepted, the residual surprise can be channeled away from the frisson
response and into a more sustained feeling of awe. In effectively composed CMCRs, the result of this commingling of shock
and resolution can be nothing short of the pure musical pleasure that comes from an expectation realized, but in an
unexpected way. (65)
[6.1] John Williams is perhaps the most prolific employer of CMCRs in contemporary film music, with many of the heavily
foregrounded cues from his iconic scores hosting such cadences. Scenes of wonderment and exultation are common
occurrences in the fantastic films he specializes in. This is doubly true in films marketed for, and frequently including as
characters, children: E.T., Home Alone, Harry Potter, and so on. The affinity of young persons’ films and these sorts of
chromatic modulations has much to do with the air of ingenuousness such musical events can convey. Stripped of the
learned deliberation and impression of effort attendant with more conventional modulatory strategies, the CMCR presents
itself as a tonally and emotionally direct alternative, something that bypasses diatonic logic and gets to the “heart” of musical
associativity. Like a child untrained in the ways of pivot chord modulations and closely related key metrics, the CMCR asks
“why not simply move directly to this key?” In Williams’s scores, the seeming naiveté of this strategy might belie the
refinement of local techniques that go into manufacturing CMCRs. But, like cadential mickey-mousing, those devices serve
to make the inherently discontinuous and surprising sound, retrospectively, as seamless—even inevitable—as possible.
[6.2] Examples 26 and 27 offer two instances from the library of chromatic cadences in Williams’s output, both from films
aimed primarily at children and the young at heart. The kindred CMCRs from E.T.: The Extra Terrestrial (1984) and Harry
Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone (2001) both follow a protracted crescendo on a tense cadential chord, and accompany moments of
positive emotional release coupled with a freshly unveiled source of wonderment. (66) Example 26, from Williams’s 2001
score to Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone (dir. Columbus) offers a “textbook” CMCR. During the brief “Change of Seasons”
sequence, Harry walks through an empty courtyard with his Snowy Owl, Hedwig, and releases the bird to fly gracefully over
the castle Hogwarts. For Potter’s stroll, a short melodic phrase gestures towards a determinate cadence into G major
(measure 4), an HC that projects an overlap with the next phrase, “becoming,” projectively at least, an IAC. (67) As soon as he
releases Hedwig, the dominant progresses to B major, the tonic of a new lyrical theme (measure 5), making this a Type II
CMCR (down a major third—one of Williams’s favorite strategies). A melodic third in the woodwinds (G4–A4–B4) helps
stitch the two RP-related chords together. Only three attributes (8, 10, and 11) are subtracted, though the harp arpeggio
installs some of the feeling of attribute 8 and the determinate nature of the CMCR obviates 10 and 11 (see Example 23). The
rhetorical factors are all at play: the pre-resolution swell, the post-resolution grand orchestral tutti, and the exultant and
expansive character as Hedwig flies freely, exposing the magnificent breadth of the fantastic castle.
[6.3] A somewhat less “well-behaved” CMCR occurs in E.T. The passage from “E.T. is Alive!” reproduced in Example 27
features a build-up over a pedal IV chord in D major. (68) The tonal buildup matches the protagonist Eliot’s rapidly
dawning realization that his alien companion is once more alive. E.T.’s resurrection is confirmed musically with the landing
on C major and a jubilantly restored rendition of his character theme. This constitutes a Type III CMCR (see Example 25
above), with an adjusted attribute 5 (the cadential chord is rooted on , not , providing an extra tritonal jolt to the bass
motion). The amorphous harmonic rhythm makes this a good example of an indeterminate cadence, yet the melody points
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to a specific moment of resolution. The melodic pitch C 6 is captured as the terminus of an ascending scalar pattern
[C 4–C 5, B4–B5]. The 8+8 scalar scheme aligns the pitches of the D-major collection with the 4/4 meter such that a triadic
member of the expected tonic (either D, F , or A) is not predicted on the downbeat of the sixth measure; the surprising C 6
is instead virtually insured. The chromatic destination is thus both a surprise and, in a powerful sense, anticipated—a fine
demonstration of why calling CMCRs “deceptive” underplays their vivid correctness in context. Had Williams simply chosen
to “correctly” resolve V /D to D on the downbeat of E.T.’s revivification, the resolution would sound not only bland, but in
its own way more surprising than C major—albeit surprising in an inappropriate way for both its linear/metrical and
dramatic context. (69)
[6.4] These two examples show CMCRs being deployed as one-off events in the interest of suddenly expanding tonal space.
But while most serve as single cadential focal points within a larger cue, some sequences feature several chromatic cadential
modulations, or even proliferations of them. (70) One such piece is the CMCR-saturated “Flyover” scene from Williams’s
score to Spielberg’s Jurassic Park (1993), and the concluding analysis of this cue will serve to demonstrate the full affective and
structural power of the cinematic cadence. The “Flyover” music comprises the second of five sections within the continuous
composite-cue called “Journey to the Island,” in which four characters are introduced to the park for the first time. At almost
nine minutes in duration, “Journey” is the score’s musical centerpiece, heavily foregrounded in the film’s sound mix as it
accompanies the protagonists’ entrance to the titular park and their first awed experience of its wonders. The “Flyover”
matches two minutes worth of nearly dialogue-free geographic spectacle for the arrival by helicopter at the tropical island
that houses the movie’s prehistoric attractions.
[6.6] Arriving by CMCR Type III to this new key, Williams commences the brassy “Island Fanfare” theme that dominates the
sequence. Interestingly, the modulation does not realize the implied melodic destination of D 6, which is left unheard in
both the texture-setting measure 7 and theme-proper measure 8. The dramatic bridge from “Entrance” to “Journey” is thus
accomplished by subtracting attributes 6 and 7 (concerning melodic continuity) from an otherwise paradigmatic CMCR.
Neither is the pitch D allowed to establish itself harmonically at the end of the theme (measures 11–12), despite gesturing
towards it as the destination of a half cadence that lands on A major. (This follows on the heels of a strong tonicization of
B ’s submediant G minor in measures 9–10, lending to the impression that D would act as V/V of a new key). Instead,
Williams returns directly to another statement of the theme, once again in B . This effects a Type IV CMCR, an ironically
key-preserving tonal swerve over the boundary between measures 11 and 12, in which A major is retrospectively interpreted as
a dominant-substituting VII 3/B .
[6.7] Example 29 provides an overview of the entire “Flyover” sequence through a voice-leading reduction. Dramatic
developments are indicated above the main system, while a third staff shows the implied tonal resolutions of CMCRs as in
the reduction of Key Largo (Example 22). We see that the sequence initially clings to a straightforward linkage of editorial
rhythm to tonal planning, with the CMCR-matched cut to the island landscape (event 2) complemented with a
(non-chromatic) modulation to G minor upon the return to the helicopter cabin (event 3). This clean association of cuts with
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tonal shifts is lifted soon thereafter, though arrivals on B are nevertheless retained for cuts to the helicopter. G minor’s
dominant (D major) discharges onto B minor as the passengers begin buckling their seatbelts amidst sudden turbulence
(event 4). A prolonged dominant over C gestures towards F major (and perhaps back to B ) as one passenger finds his
seatbelt malfunctioning (event 6). Williams has other things in mind, however, and the dominant resolves via a Type IV
CMCR to D major, which two measures later reverts to B ; this eventful span is reproduced in Example 30.
[6.8] The remainder of “Flyover” amplifies the proliferation of CMCRs. Alternation between interior and exterior helicopter
shots becomes quicker. A second feint to D minor (now with suspensions to further weaken its claim to tonal stability) is
denied with a shunt from A to B with the reveal of the helicopter’s landing pad (event 10). The descent of the chopper onto
its landing pad (event 11) denies D major in another fashion, sending its dominant to the hitherto unheard key of D (Type
III, sans attributes 6 and 7). Modulations now occur without any direct visual impetus; the breathless expectancy of
successfully landing is sufficient justification for Williams to insert new tonal areas into “Flyover.” The move to D is
mirrored by stepwise CMCRs to D (a failed dominant to G once more) and then E (event 13). As Hammond disembarks
and brandishes his signature staff triumphantly, Williams proclaims one final cadential sleight of hand, shown in Example
31. A , a blaring subdominant of E —the loudest moment in the entire cue—is slung to C major (event 14) with an
especially bold plagal Type IV (shorn, like the E.T. example, of attribute 5—the cadential chord is not a dominant). C major
is then confirmed, in a manner not heard yet in the entire piece (or entire score to this point, for that matter): with an
unambiguous IV-V-I PAC. The protagonists have finally arrived where they are supposed to be (event 15), as have we, the
listening audience members. By this point, the PAC in C actually sticks out as marked. What is perhaps most characteristically
“filmic” about the chromatic key design of this cue is that it takes a motion that in any normal diatonic context the final PAC
would sound innocuous and renders it as surprising as the most far-flung chromatic modulation. Such play with tonal
assumptions—producing here a veritable unexpected expectation—is only possible in a harmonic context such as Williams
concocts here, where chromatically resolving cadences become a default rather than an exception.
[6.9] Williams’s music for Jurassic Park illustrates the extent to which cadences are not merely useful resources but sometimes
the very building blocks of a cue, essential for dynamically sculpting the filmgoer’s experience of a cinematic text. As I have
argued, studying cadences offers a means to conduct rigorous analysis of film scores—a corpus highly resistant to traditional
analytic systems that presuppose long-range tonal design—while remaining faithful to the repertoire’s dramatic
idiosyncrasies. This focus in turn clarifies and expands our understanding of cadences across idioms. Many harmonic
routines that are instantly recognizable in film soundtracks are better treated as though they were genres, with independent
converging musical phenomena, rather than as expressions of a prescriptively defined concept. This is indicative of the
importance of theoretical flexibility and historical-sensitivity in defining not-so-stable musical procedures. As seen with
analyses ranging from film logos to phrasal mickey-mousing in Robin Hood to music for modern day Westerns, the processes
of substitution and subtraction allow composers to continually reinvent what otherwise could become a stale cliché, adapting
materials to new scoring practices and linking large swathes of film history together for attentive listeners. Studying the
cadence in film carries a promise of close-analytic, stylistic, and meta-theoretical findings, and provides us with a robust new
tool for understanding that elusive thing, the “Hollywood sound.”
Frank Lehman
Department of Music, Tufts University
Granoff Music Center
20 Talbot Avenue
Medford, MA 20155
Cambridge, MA 02138
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Footnotes
1. I wish to thank those who contributed insight and feedback at various stages of this project, including Martin Marks, Mark
Richards, Tom Schneller, William Rosar, William Cheng, and the anonymous reviewers for MTO. Thanks especially to Janet
Schmalfeldt for generous feedback on a draft of this article, and to Scott Murphy for his extensive and invaluable input at
several stages of this article’s genesis.
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2. These include notable monographs on music and visual media practices, including Kassabian 2000, Cook 2004, and
Lexmann 2006. Reaching back further, Kalinak 1992 and Gorbman 1987 erect the foundations of contemporary film
musicology and its strong emphasis on the semantic and ideological dimensions of film music. Of them, only Kassabian
(115–16) considers the topic of cadence, and there primarily in a metaphorical, rather than music-theoretical, sense.
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3. Studies from Bribitzer-Stull (2007) and Murphy (2006 and 2011), isolate specific harmonic progressions frequently
employed in genre cinema. Halfyard (2010) does something similar for an interval (the melodic tritone). Some of these
“cellular” approaches target specific composers. For example, Rosar (2002) considers quartal harmony in the music of Leith
Stevens, and Schneller (2012) isolates voice-leading patterns in Bernard Herrmann. Buhler (2012) suggests that topic theory
can be fruitfully applied to film analysis and criticism.
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4. For a discussion of the nature of this putative “film music sound,” see Rosar 2002 and a response from Carroll and Moore
(2011, 456–59).
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5. All musical examples and the analyses based on them for this article stem from my own transcriptions from original
motion picture soundtracks. Major chords are represented by capital letters, minor by lower case. Chordal inversion is
indicated by slash notation. In many cases, the richness of orchestration, syncopated counterlines, and harmonic filigree is
largely forfeited. Yet because my attention lies solely on cadences, which are still clear, the loss of detail is, I hope, an
acceptable sacrifice.
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6. J. Kent Williams (2008) calls this the “plagal sigh,” and notes its widespread use in Golden Era American popular song,
where it is often linked to sentiments of “sadness, regret, resignation, weakness, or a dreamlike state.” This affective
dimension can be seen to overlap with Golden Age melodramatic film music, which often employs a similar harmonic idiom
to that of the American songbook.
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7. Romantic usages often serve to re-color the conventional post-cadential plagal “Amen.” The twin summits of Wagner’s
Erlösung-devoted aesthetic, Tristan and Götterdämmerung, both conclude their final acts with conspicuous iterations of this
motion. So fond of the gesture was Wagner that he even re-wrote the closing bars of Fliegende Hollander in its 1860 revision to
incorporate a IV–ii° 6–I progression (see Millington 1992, 279).
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8. See Carter 2002 for an exploration of the spiritual connotations of subdominant harmony, and flat-side regions such as
VII and VI, in the context of eighteenth and nineteenth-century music.
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9. See Bordwell, Staiger, and Thomson 1987 for the definitive accounting of the various habits and techniques of narrative
construction and continuity editing for this period.
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10. Buhler’s description relates to Newman’s fanfare as it is used to presage John Williams’s similarly nostalgic scores for the
Star Wars saga.
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12. Because the natural setting for this routine is at cue’s (or score’s) end—one of the most rhetorically freighted moments in
any composition—the M-PC’s tendency towards overstatement risks shifting any transcendent affective aspirations towards
cheapness and parodic overstatement. This may be the reason composers tend to use mixed plagal cadences only in filtered
or allusive ways. Deviations from the fanfaric model in Example 3 (below) can be thought of as “cheesiness-softening”
strategies, aimed to prevent lapsing into what theorist of parlor harmony Peter van der Merwe ( 1989) would consider
purveying the “late romantic schmaltz” of pop-chromaticism.
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13. David Neumeyer (Neumeyer 1998) offers a critique of the constructive potential of tonality and the use of traditional
categories of musical analysis on a repertoire determined by the demands of cinematic contingency. The recent preference
for approaches that concentrate on smaller units of musical discourse may be seen as an answer to the skepticism Neumeyer
has expressed regarding large-scale structural analysis of film scores.
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14. This too is inspired by Schmalfeldt (2011, 9), in this case her “becomes” arrow, though I will employ such notation in a
more restricted manner, solely with regard to cadences.
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15. While not a psychological study, my exploration of cadential expectation draws from the literature of expectancy and
emotion in music, particularly the cognitive associationist model proposed by Cohen (1993), and the investigations of
dynamic anticipation and emotional valence by Huron (2006), which is foundational to my approach to chromatic
modulations in Section V.
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16. Gorbman’s (1987, 70–98) account of the musical semiotics and syntax of Classical Hollywood music syntax is the
canonical delineation of the various functions of the soundtrack, with narrative cueing and emotional signification being two
of her seven principles.
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17. George Burt (1994, 83) cites tonal resolution as one of many compositional strategies of “pointing up an event” in the
film’s narrative, lending it higher narratival salience or semantic specificity.
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18. Of dominant prolongation during cadential expansion, Caplin notes: “The heightened dramatic expression inherent in
this gesture makes it ideal for use in operatic and concerto genres . . .” (Caplin 1998, 109). Huron describes a “veritable
bouquet of psychological effects” involved in simple delay in cadential passages. He likens the impact to “the use of slow
motion in films,” as both magnify expectation and install temporary doubt as to successful arrival (Huron 2006, 314–18).
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19. Tension which Herrmann accomplishes through explicit musical references to Tristan und Isolde to further tie the film’s
themes of love and death. The Wagner/Herrmann-Hitchcock connection is explored in depth in Cooper 2001 and John
2001.
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20. Caplin finds standing on the dominant passages in classical forms often serving postcadential (most often, post-half-
cadential) formal function; their resolution to tonic chords are not afforded cadential status (See Caplin 2004, 16, 113–15,
157–59). Because film music is not based on formal functions in Caplin’s sense, I admit entry of these stretched out
tension/release patterns into the category of cadences and entrust the “indeterminate” label to capture their difference from
Classical models. See Section III.
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21. Daniel Goldmark (2005, 6) states that the phrase “mickey-mousing” arose in the 1930s as a (then derogatory) term for
precise, frequent, and literal-minded music-visual synchronization in live-action scoring .
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22. In addition to an analysis of the score’s unsurprisingly dense thematic web, Winters provides background on Korngold’s
working methods and sources (including self-borrowings).
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23. Rather than stemming from painstakingly determined synch-points such as those utilized by the master of mickey-
mousing, Max Steiner, Korngold’s facility with synchronization was largely instinctual. The composer of Robin Hood was
famous for devising such music as the bridge fight by piano improvisation, without the aid of synchronization aids like
stopwatches. Remarkably, Korngold initially refused to score Robin Hood out of concern over the complex action sequences,
claiming that he was “not a musical illustrator for a 90% action picture.” (quoted in Winters 2007, 77)
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24. A good way to demonstrate this absorptive quality is to apply the “commutation [substitution] test,” the principles of
which are laid out in Gorbman (1987, 15–18) and explored by Tagg (2003, 98).
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25. The former resolution (measures 1–3) is an instance of an indeterminate cadence, one of the few in the otherwise tightly
determined cue, small metrical expansions and contractions notwithstanding.
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26. In the Classical style, these V–I motions qualify as elided cadences, in which the conclusion of a mini-AC is
simultaneously the initiation of a melodic phrase. See Schmalfeldt 1992 and Caplin 1998.
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27. Caplin’s remarks on the plagal cadence (2004, 71–72) rests on what he claims is the subdominant’s inability to project
structural expectations as the leading-tone bearing V does. This is unquestionably not the case in film music: structural plagal
cadences are rife, as are plagal half cadences.
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28. Some aspects of Caplin’s cadential typology have been challenged by theorists; these includes the strict differentiation of
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cadence type when elision is involved (Burstein 2010), how cadences are informed by non-harmonic factors (Richards 2010),
and the necessity of a non-dissonant dominant at a half cadence (Schmalfeldt 2011, on the “nineteenth-century cadence).
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29. We should not separate these two categories too inflexibly; syntax, particularly in film music, can be something of a
function of rhetoric, thus forcing a reversal of the strong analytic bias favoring the former over the latter. In fact, the
categories may on occasion be indistinguishable. Kofi Agawu, from whom Caplin’s notion of “rhetoric” stems, cautions that
“there is no structure without rhetoric; rhetoric does not merely adorn—it defines” (Agawu 2009, 31). The
syntactical/structural elements within a musical work are inherently rhetorical, and compositional choices of more seemingly
“expressive” intent invariably have structural implications. A similar point is articulated by Neumeyer (Neumeyer 1998),
specifically with respect to film music; his categories of tonal teleology and associativity map broadly to Caplin/Agawu’s
syntax/structure and rhetoric, and he warns that the former on its own is not a meaningful parameter in film music analysis.
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30. Also noteworthy is the fact that Korngold re-purposes music from the bridge fight for two subsequent mêlées, first the
clumsy duel with Friar Tuck, and later the climactic confrontation with Sir Guy. In both cases, small changes to tempo and
metrical additions or subtractions enable sometimes astonishingly precise synchronization.
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31. Max Steiner, somewhat dismissively, calls this “overall” scoring: musical accompaniment that avoids responding locally to
the image, rather overlaying a scene with a more holistic sort of expressivity. See Neumeyer 2000, 15, 25. In practice, film
music rarely falls rigidly into categories of “mickey-mousing” or “overall” scoring. All but the most intentionally cartoonish
cues will only ever reflect a handful of points of synchronization while playing through countless others.
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32. Quoted in Altman 2011, 83. See also Swales 2008, 33–61 for a discussion of Wittgensteinian notions of family
resemblance with relation to film genre.
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33. The notion of paradigm I am employing bears its own family resemblance to that of the prototype, in which certain types
better exemplify a given category because they present more and stronger members of a typicality trait inventory. Prototype
theory was developed in the 1970s by Rosch and later Lakoff. Its most notable application to music theory is in Zbikowski
2002. I maintain that my cinematic cadential genres are strongly of Zbikowski’s “Type I” variety—free of necessary and/or
sufficient conditions.
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34. My system of attributes and paradigms draws inspiration partly from Robert Gjerdingen’s schema theory for eighteenth-
century music. It agrees particularly with his attitude towards schematic exemplars as not necessarily bearing all the features
assumed of the idealized prototype. Though Gjerdingen does not adopt an attribute-listing strategy quite as I do here, his
schematic representations and enumerations of central features and variations accomplishes essentially the same goal. See
Gjerdingen 2007, 10–16 and 453–64.
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35. Robert Hatten (1994, 41–42, 265–67) treats cadences as sites of potential markedness (especially deceptive cadences).
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36. Some attributes here may seem to be mutually implicative, but an apparently redundant subcluster of traits in a paradigm
case may turn out to be detachable in a heavily altered variant.
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37. Altman’s analysis of the Western centers on its radically contingent filmic origins: it borrowed elements from other
established genres, and to a certain extent was the product of film critical discourse itself (Altman 2011, 34–37).
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38. An influential formulation of the Western genre comes from structuralist Jim Kitses (2004), for whom the genre is
determined by a dialectic between “The Wilderness” and “Civilization.” Jordan Stokes (2012) offers a more recent
exploration of Western generic qualities in light of music and narration. A peerless, if highly informal resource on such
matters is the wikipage TVtropes.org (http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TheWestern).
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39. For discussion of pentatonic flavor of Classic westerns (such as Stagecoach and Shane), see Skinner 1950 and Beckerman
and Rosar 2009. Additionally, see Scheurer 2008, for an overview of this and many other persistent style topics in the film
Western. Rodman (2011, 43–45) draws a connection between pentatonicism and the Cowboy songbook of John Lomax.
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40. Neil Lerner (2001) explores the use of Copland-esque tropes in Hollywood. While he does not touch on pentatonic or
subtonic cadential archetypes, his survey of influence from Friedhofer to Horner cements the persistence of musical
procedures that also go into the specific harmonic routines studied here.
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41. Another route, instigated by the popularity of Ennio Morricone’s spaghetti western scores (with some precedents in the
music of more establishment figures like Dimitri Tiomkin), favored inventive and sparse instrumentation, accompaniment
that alternates between extremes of subtle underscoring and overwhelmingly foregrounded lyricism, and aeolian- and
dorian-moded themes (or pentatonic subscales thereof). In the past two decades, harmonic fashion has decisively swung in
the Morricone-direction over the Coplandesque. A third way, on display most prominently in the scores of Jerry Fielding (The
Wild Bunch, The Outlaw Josey Wales), adopts a more modernist tonal aesthetic, but even these “revisionist” scores feature
elements of folk song and hymnody characteristic of the established Western idiom.
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42. The term “subtonic half cadence” is shorthand for “subtonic to dominant half cadence.” An HC that omits V and dwells
simply on VII would involve subtraction of attributes 2, 3, and 4 from the cadence’s inventory.
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43. R is the operation that displaces a triad’s non-M3 forming pitch by whole-tone to produce another triad. P is the
operation that displaces a triad’s non-P5 forming pitch by semitone to produce another triad. L, the neo-Riemann group
completing operation, displaces a triad’s non-m3 forming pitch by semitone to produce another triad. For an introduction to
neo-Riemannian theory and analysis, see Cohn 1998.
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44. The same RP transformation underlies another filmically widespread tonal progression— VI–IV—which, under certain
circumstances, can assume associative and formal duties similar to the S-HC.
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45. See, for example, Tagg and Clarida 2003, 357–62, and Cooke 2008, 129–30. Tagg labels this fingerprint the “cowboy half
cadence” in his discussion of tonal characteristics of what he calls “big-country modalism.” Without ascribing direct
influence, Tagg notes that the cadence impacts Western-themed popular musics as well as film, pointing to the opening
(non-cadential) major triad T 9 s of Credence Clearwater Revival’s “Proud Mary” and a number of instrumental pieces by the
band The Shadows in the 1960s (Tagg and Clarida 2003, 357–62). That these examples should arrive shortly after Moross
and Bernstein’s widely heard scores further suggests a case of film influencing popular music. Everett 2009, 279, examines
the explosion in the use of this progression in 1960s pop music.
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46. Whitmer 2012 offers extensive analysis of this score, though she does not bring up the harmonic construction of the title
theme.
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47. Many commentators have linked Moross’s cadential fingerprint to the similarly subtonic-favoring style of Aaron Copland.
However, despite a strong link between their two styles (and indeed, professional lives), Copland did not use the S-HC with
any regularity, and claims of importation into The Big Country, such as that made by Cooke (2008, 129), lack concrete or
accurate evidence, and fail to entertain the possible influence of other American composers like Thomson or Ives. Moross
used the subtonic half cadence throughout his career, including in works predating Copland’s influential Red Pony (for
example, in his 1946 Variations on a Waltz). It is probable that Moross, a composer with a inclination to both chromaticism
and pure triads, simply arrived upon the progression on his own as a means of harmonizing the inevitably present folksy .
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48. With a degree of unreserved enthusiasm typical of accounts of this score, Christopher Palmer says of the theme: “The
very first bars of the title—one of the most electrifying in film music—are inspired” (1993, 314).
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49. Moross was not as consistent in maintaining the Western generic ties to the S-HC as were the many other composers
influenced by The Big Country. For example, Moross’s score to The Cardinal, which takes place in interwar Boston and Rome,
features the progression prominently in its main title theme.
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50. The III–V half cadence is more characteristic of the Morricone model for Western film scoring, and, like the S-HC, has
enjoyed remarkable associative longevity, noticeable even in Hans Zimmer’s score to the 2013 The Lone Ranger reboot.
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51. The simplest—and most radical—change is simply to eliminate the antecedent-concluding dominant altogether (thus
subtracting attributes 2–4). This leaves VII to support and diminishes the strength of the half cadence, if it can be heard
as such at all. An example can be found in the main credits sequence for Support your Local Gunfighter (Jack Elliott, 1968). This
change of the cowboy cadence paradigm tends to bend a theme’s harmonic trajectory towards a I– VII oscillation rather
than a cadence-impelled tonal progression, a procedure more characteristic of Copland’s “Western” music than the line
starting with Moross.
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52. Other doubly iterated applications of the S-HC can be found in Goldsmith’s title music for Bandolero, Breakheart Pass, and
Hollister. A triple iteration (!) occurs in the modulatory bridge of his theme for The Wild Rovers.
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53. In pop music scholarship, these have been called “double plagal” progressions. See Everett 2009, 274, and Biamonte
2010.
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54. This progression is an instance of the “SLIDE” transformation, as coined in Lewin 1987 and considered in film music
contexts in Lehman 2013.
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55. Goldsmith’s theme to 1992’s The Love Field (like JFK, a Kennedy assassination drama) also recruits the progression as a
PAC-preparation, though there it is the product of a heavily blues-inspired harmonic idiom.
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56. The ethnic or folk allusion seems further abstracted away in S-ACs that occur in patriotic films and television shows such
as Dave (James Newton Howard, 1993), Independence Day (David Arnold, 1996), The West Wing (W. G. Snuffy Walden,
1999–2006); Flyboy (Trevor Rabin, 2006), The Kennedys (2012), and White House Down (Harald Kloser, 2013). Thanks to an
anonymous reviewer for suggesting some of these examples.
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57. The technique is best known in these other repertoires as the device of shifting a key by semi- or whole-tone at a
climactic moment late in a song, for which it has garnered descriptors such as “truck-driver’s modulation” (Everett 2009,
283–84), “pump up modulation” (Doll 2011), and “shotgun modulation” (Sayrs 2003, in the context of a Steiner score for
the Western Hanging Tree, no less!). The CMCR is both more specific than the pump-up modulation (in requiring motion
from a root position V to root position I) and more general (by including modulations by intervals other than ic1–2). Even
so, the expressive effect and formal implications of CMCRs are not dissimilar. While subject to similar derisive assessment
from critics and commentators, they too may be implemented artfully. Even in crude instances, expressive stepwise
modulations pose vital questions about the nature of prolongation in chromatically inflected tonal music. Buchler (2008)
broaches these issues in terms of the formal and rhetorical effects of chromatic key-changes issuing from the pen of Frank
Loesser.
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58. CMCRs to minor tonics are possible but much less frequent in film music, since they lack the element of joyous
exuberance and the fantastic that is the essential reason for their widespread usage in genre cinema.
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59. The closest analogue in standard diatonic theory to these abrupt, ground-shifting dominant resolutions is the deceptive
cadence. However, there is a crucial difference between this cinematic technique and deceptive precedents in the eighteenth
and especially nineteenth-century repertoire. In a common-practice deceptive cadence, the chord of resolution is felt as a
tonic substitute, and still requires a second attempt at cadencing to capture the proper original key. In a CMCR, by contrast,
the chord of resolution is a stable tonic, fit for either concluding a cue or initiating a new musical paragraph in its own key.
Certainly, the idea of shuttling abruptly to keys located at chromatic removes from each other is an essential component of
Romantic tonal syntax. However, it remains uncommon that these direct modulations are achieved on the heels of a cadence.
More often, composers simply warp directly from one tonic triad to another, with common tones potentially softening the
impact of otherwise unmediated tonal disruption.
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60. These networks are, of course, not universally realizable, due to their mixture of dualistic and transpositional
transformations. This is a non-issue, because the input triadic mode needs to be major for these to constitute CMCRs.
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61. To Huron (2006, 31–35), awe is an aesthetic “freeze” reaction, “a form of pleasurable surprise, one that mixes a sense of
apparent sustained danger with an appraisal that the situation is okay or good.” Frisson, on the other hand, is a variation of
the “fight” response, an “increase in physiological arousal.”
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62. Huron cites here a study by Sloboda that found that abrupt modulations, particularly chromatic ones, are linked with
shiver responses.
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63. The structural fissures and rhetorical expansion of the CMCR recall the Mahlerian symphonic strategy of Durchbruch, or
“breakthrough,” as formulated by Paul Bekker and refined by Theodor Adorno (See Buhler 1996). Indeed, the triumphant
explosion into D major in the last movement of the Titan (measures 370–75) is a perfect example of a chromatically
modulating cadential resolution. James Buhler’s 1996 article “‘Breakthrough’ as Critique of Form: The Finale of Mahler’s
First Symphony” offers a rich investigation of the formal and cultural bases of this Mahler fingerprint.
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64. The emotional trajectory described here is based around Huron’s ITPRA model of expectation (Huron 2006, 1–18).
Briefly: the anticipation of correct diatonic cadential resolution corresponds to the imagination phase; the gathering
harmonic and metrical dissonance the tension phase; the failed anticipation of a diatonic resolution to the prediction phase;
the sheer jolt an unexpected chord to the reaction phase; and the mixture of met and unmet rhetorical expectations to a very
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complex appraisal phase.
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65. CMCRs, like M-PC resolutions, can also easily fall into the aesthetic category of schmaltz. How such gestures are received
depends entirely on the genre of the film and the perspective of the audience viewing it. Cooke notes, of Steiner: “Certainly
his work contains many crudities and clichés, such as the saccharine modulations to the major when a sick child recovers in
Sierra Madre and after the villain dies at the climax of Key Largo—a film replete with predictable stingers and melodramatic
orchestral flourishes” (Cooke 2008, 92). Surely, there is no flourish more melodramatic than a Hollywood cadence on the
heels of a CMCR!
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66. While representatives of CMCR Types I–V can easily be found in Williams’s scores, Type VI (V– IV=I) appears to be an
exception. Its disfavor is attributable to its more relaxational, as opposed to intensificatory, sound. The likely melodic
destination, of the new key, is relatively weak compared to the fruits of and of the other five cadences.
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67. The overlap of cadential functions rests on a play of projective and retrospective hearing. Projectively, we expect this to
be an elided authentic cadence of some kind, but since it turns out not to be an authentic cadence, the dominant D ends up
being the last strictly “cadential” chord heard. This is an inversion of the behavior sometimes found with standing-on-the-
dominant passages, which begin as a formal HC and end with an elided PAC, such as Caplin observes in the Pathétique Sonata
(1998, 205).
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68. The pedal chord could possibly be interpreted as a V , but given the intense lydian bent of the E.T. score at large, this
cadential chord should count as a subtraction of attribute 5 all the same.
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69. This sense of the “correctness” of non-diatonic cadential resolutions is noted by Meyer as a characteristic of nineteenth-
century harmony syntax. He claims that “the authentic cadence, a norm in classical and early romantic music, sometimes
appears to be a deviant in the style of the late nineteenth century. . . . [A chromatic cadence from Ein Heldenleben] leads us to
expect almost anything but the tonic; and when the tonic does come, it is definitely felt to be a deviant” (Meyer 1962, 66).
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70. See, for example, “Cadillac of the Skies” from Empire of the Sun, analyzed in Lehman 2012, 13–73.
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71. The combination of bass motion (C 2–F 2) and melodic line (B5 – C 6) in measures 4–6 could accommodate both tonal
hearings, either (B: IV–ii 7–V) or (A : VI–iv 7– VII). If the latter is the case, we have an example of an CMCR that has
subtracted attribute 5, replacing the dominant with a (admittedly filmic) mixolydian VII substitute.
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