Canzoni d'attore. Musica, performance e (nuovi) media nel film "Lo chiamavano Jeeg Robot" (2015)

The article addresses the role of music and media in Gabriele Mainetti’s film “Lo chiamavano Jeeg Robot” (“They Call Me Jeeg”, 2015). In so doing it relies on an interdisciplinary framework combining musicology, performance studies and media studies. I start by considering the production, c...

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Main Author: Alessandro Cecchi
Format: Article
Language:Italian
Published: Università degli Studi di Milano 2020-06-01
Series:Schermi
Subjects:
Online Access:https://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/schermi/article/view/12973
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spelling doaj-97153cc26a2e4754be435a94c800bfd72020-11-25T03:52:33ZitaUniversità degli Studi di MilanoSchermi2532-24862020-06-014710.13130/2532-2486/12973Canzoni d'attore. Musica, performance e (nuovi) media nel film "Lo chiamavano Jeeg Robot" (2015)Alessandro Cecchi0nessuna The article addresses the role of music and media in Gabriele Mainetti’s film “Lo chiamavano Jeeg Robot” (“They Call Me Jeeg”, 2015). In so doing it relies on an interdisciplinary framework combining musicology, performance studies and media studies. I start by considering the production, circulation and reception of pre-existing music used in the film, then I shift to the dramaturgy of the film in relation to both its original music and compiled soundtrack. While the latter, including Italian songs from the period 1978-1982, is referred to the character of Fabio Cannizzaro aka “lo Zingaro” (Luca Marinelli), the former unwinds alongside the evolving psychology of the protagonist Enzo Ceccotti (Claudio Santamaria). The use of songs in the film incorporates and expresses multiple dimensions of performance: the actor’s performance, the villain’s criminal and musical persona, and the performativity of the media, which the film explicitly problematizes. This allows to frame the film and its compilation soundtrack in a wider perspective, reflecting upon the Italian media system of the 1980s and its relation with the present pervasiveness of new digital media. https://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/schermi/article/view/12973Luca MarinelliClaudio SantamariaGabriele Mainetticompilation soundtrackfilm musicmediation
collection DOAJ
language Italian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alessandro Cecchi
spellingShingle Alessandro Cecchi
Canzoni d'attore. Musica, performance e (nuovi) media nel film "Lo chiamavano Jeeg Robot" (2015)
Schermi
Luca Marinelli
Claudio Santamaria
Gabriele Mainetti
compilation soundtrack
film music
mediation
author_facet Alessandro Cecchi
author_sort Alessandro Cecchi
title Canzoni d'attore. Musica, performance e (nuovi) media nel film "Lo chiamavano Jeeg Robot" (2015)
title_short Canzoni d'attore. Musica, performance e (nuovi) media nel film "Lo chiamavano Jeeg Robot" (2015)
title_full Canzoni d'attore. Musica, performance e (nuovi) media nel film "Lo chiamavano Jeeg Robot" (2015)
title_fullStr Canzoni d'attore. Musica, performance e (nuovi) media nel film "Lo chiamavano Jeeg Robot" (2015)
title_full_unstemmed Canzoni d'attore. Musica, performance e (nuovi) media nel film "Lo chiamavano Jeeg Robot" (2015)
title_sort canzoni d'attore. musica, performance e (nuovi) media nel film "lo chiamavano jeeg robot" (2015)
publisher Università degli Studi di Milano
series Schermi
issn 2532-2486
publishDate 2020-06-01
description The article addresses the role of music and media in Gabriele Mainetti’s film “Lo chiamavano Jeeg Robot” (“They Call Me Jeeg”, 2015). In so doing it relies on an interdisciplinary framework combining musicology, performance studies and media studies. I start by considering the production, circulation and reception of pre-existing music used in the film, then I shift to the dramaturgy of the film in relation to both its original music and compiled soundtrack. While the latter, including Italian songs from the period 1978-1982, is referred to the character of Fabio Cannizzaro aka “lo Zingaro” (Luca Marinelli), the former unwinds alongside the evolving psychology of the protagonist Enzo Ceccotti (Claudio Santamaria). The use of songs in the film incorporates and expresses multiple dimensions of performance: the actor’s performance, the villain’s criminal and musical persona, and the performativity of the media, which the film explicitly problematizes. This allows to frame the film and its compilation soundtrack in a wider perspective, reflecting upon the Italian media system of the 1980s and its relation with the present pervasiveness of new digital media.
topic Luca Marinelli
Claudio Santamaria
Gabriele Mainetti
compilation soundtrack
film music
mediation
url https://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/schermi/article/view/12973
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