American Decades
"The Aims of Music for Films"
Newspaper article
By: Aaron Copland
Date: March 10, 1940
Source: Copland, Aaron. "The Aims of Music for Films." The New York Times, March 10, 1940. About the Author: Aaron Copland (1900–1990) was a composer, performer, and teacher. He began his formal musical education at the age of fourteen by taking private piano lessons. He studied in Paris with Nadia Boulanger, the first of many Americans to do so. His best-known symphonic works incorporate American popular song types, such as hymns, cowboy tunes, Mexican dances, Latin American rhythms, and folk tunes.
Introduction
The ease with which Aaron Copland could move from popular to serious music, his ability to incorporate folk and jazz in his symphonic compositions, and his endless energy and wit made him an especially welcome visitor in the Hollywood of the late 1930s and 1940s. During this period, which is...
[The entire page is 2147 words long]
1940's The Arts Primary Sources
- "The Aims of Music for Films"
- "The Irresponsibles"
- Speech on the Dedication of the National Gallery of Art
- "I Got it Bad (and that Ain't Good)"
- Let Us Now Praise Famous Men
- "The Life of John Brown" Series, No. 17
- What Is Modern Painting
- On the Town Caricature
- "Richard Wright's Blues"
- The Iceman Cometh
- "What Hollywood Can Do"
- "The Gangster As Tragic Hero"
- "Jackson Pollock: Is He the Greatest Living Painter in the United States?"
- William Faulkner's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech
- "The American Theatre"
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
