The Major Tritone Progression in Recent Hollywood Science Fiction Films

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Issue Date
2006-05Author
Murphy, Scott
Publisher
Society for Music Theory
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, author accepted manuscript
Published Version
http://www.mtosmt.org/issues/mto.06.12.2/mto.06.12.2.murphy.htmlMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In the 2002 film Treasure Planet, composer James Newton Howard accompanies the primary shot of the
titular orb with an undulation between two major triads a tritone apart. I offer three approaches to
understanding the appropriateness of this image/music pairing. First, I present several scenes from
recent Hollywood films that conspicuously combine this triadic progression with settings of, or objects
from, outer space. Second, I relay ways in which the intrinsic harmonic and voice-leading characteristics
of this triadic progression invoke the concepts of great distance, ambiguity, and unfamiliarity. Third, I
conclude with a more thorough study of Howard's harmonic language in the score for Treasure Planet,
suggesting that this progression and the scene it accompanies represents the culmination of musical and
visual/narrative processes, respectively.
Description
This is the author's accepted manuscript, and the publisher's official version is available electronically from: http://www.mtosmt.org/issues/mto.06.12.2/mto.06.12.2.murphy.html
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Citation
Murphy, Scott. “The Major Tritone Progression in Recent Hollywood Science Fiction Films,” Music
Theory Online 12/2 (May 2006)
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