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Intellect is pleased to announce that The Soundtrack 10.1 is now available!
For more information about the issue, click here >>
https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/intellect/ts/2017/00000010/00000001

*10.1 Contents*

*Editorial*
Authors: Benjamin Wright

*Samba and the descent into violence in City of God*
Authors: Hans Michael Anselmo Hess

The soundtrack analysis for Cidade de Deus (City of God) (2002)
demonstrates how the 1960s samba songs ‘Alvorada’ (‘Dawn’) and ‘Preciso Me
Encontrar’ (‘I Need to Find Myself’) used in the film represent the samba
lírico-amoroso and the depictions of rural living, idyllic favela, naivety
and the hope and desire for a better life as well as a love for the
romantic frustrations in the life of the malandro. As the story of the film
moves into a new period and the favela descends into a world of drugs,
violence and death, samba changes its use and representational function in
the film.

*Experimental phenomenology in the development of a colocative audio-visual
display*
Authors: Michael Filimowicz

This article describes the methodological background for perceptual studies
conducted on the author’s Pixelphonic display – a system that colocates
visuals and their associated sounds in moving image displays. The concept
of Pixelphonics is to add a spatial complement to synchronized sound, so
that audio can now be in place with its image, in addition to being in time
with it. Methods grounded in experimental phenomenology are used to better
understand the general perceptual response to the system, which works by
attaching a 2D array of audio exciters to the backside of a screen,
connected to signal distribution and software. Findings show the general
efficacy of the system and adequate perceptual resolution for further
development and refinement of the display. One experiment is selected for
discussion to illustrate the approach.

*Investigating sound: Visual and aural style from Broadchurch to Gracepoint*
Authors: Amanda Keeler

Using Broadchurch and its American version Gracepoint as a case study, this
article explores the aesthetic relationship between these two television
programmes through an analysis of their visual and aural styles. The
increasing proliferation of television-to-television adaptations and
remakes necessitates revisiting the terminology to assess how it
accommodates methodological approaches that extend beyond cross-cultural
analyses. As narrative content and style are inextricably connected, this
article attends to the complexity of employing existing terms to analyse
the new version of a programme that simultaneously replicates and departs
from the style and tone of its predecessor.

*Calls of the wild? ‘Fake’ sound effects and cinematic realism in BBC David
Attenborough nature documentaries*
Authors: Karen Collins

The BBC’s Planet Earth II represented a landmark in natural history
documentary television, using the latest technologies to capture nature in
ways never before seen or heard. But the series was mired in accusations of
‘fakery’ and ‘trickery’ when it came to the sound, due to its entirely
post-production soundtrack. This article explores these accusations in the
context of the history of Attenborough documentaries and contemporary
practice.

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