- Raphael Atlas, 'That Loving Feeling Meets the Danger Zone: Men, Sex, and Music in Top Gun'
- David Baker, 'I'm glad I'm not me!" Marking transitivity in Don't look back'
- Randall Barnes, 'Barton Fink: Atmospheric Sounds of the Creative Mind'
- Giorgio Biancorosso, 'Beginning Credits and Beyond: Music and the Cinematic Imagination'
- Ian Biddle, 'Love thy Neighbour? The Political Economy of Musical Neighbours?'
- Alexander Binns, 'Music in the films of Wong Kar-wai'
- Baldur Bjarnason, 'An Audiovisual Heterotopia'
- David Butler, 'The Days Do Not End: Film Music, Time and Bernard Herrmann'
- Lesley Chow, 'What the Sound Is Saying: How Music Moves in Bertolucci'
- Lesley Chow, 'Music, Morricone, and Jack Nicholson's Voice: The Soundscape of Wolf'
- Rebecca Coyle and Michael Hannan, 'Marking time in the Barry McKenzie films' music'
- Rebecca Coyle, 'Identifying Film Scoring [review of Anahid Kassabian, Hearing Film]'
- Aniruddha Dutta, 'Nation, Liberalisation And Film Songs: Technology And Hybridisation In Contemporary Hindi Film Music'
- E. Todd Fiegel, 'Bernard Herrmann as Musical Colorist: A Musico-Dramatic Analysis of His Score for The Day the Earth Stood Still'
- Steve Fore, 'From Rock kids to Beijing bastards: PRC youth subcultures on film before and after June 4'
- Liz Garnett, 'Musical Meaning Revisited: Thoughts on an 'Epic' Critical Musicology'
- Ian Garwood, 'Sound and Space in the Split-Screen Movie'
- Claudia Gorbman, 'Vigo/Jaubert' (scroll to p. 69)
- Catherine Grant, '''The "Author Function" in Transnational Film Adaptation: the Case of El lugar sin límites' (Arturo Ripstein, Manuel Puig, José Donoso)'
- Andrew Grossman, 'How to Murder John Williams: Toward an Ideology of Contrapuntal Antirealism'
- Andrew Grossman, 'Finding Unlikely Ideology in Prokofiev: Polyphonic and Anti-Authoritarian Gestures in The Gambler'
- Andrew Grossman, 'False Consonance and False Consciousness: Contrarian Notes on the Ideology of Film Music'
- Amanda Howell, 'Spectacle, masculinity, and music in blaxploitation cinema'
- Randolph Jordan, 'Brakhage’s Silent Legacy for Sound Cinema'
- Randolph Jordan, 'Transcending the Fragmentation of Experience: The acousmêtre on the air in the films of Michael Snow'
- Randolph Jordan, 'The Work of Hildegard Westerkamp in the Films of Gus Van Sant'
- Brett Kashmere, 'Beyond Notes: On Music, Improvisation and Film, and Writing [Brakhage]'
- Brett Kashmere, 'Semi-Random Thoughts about Improvisation, Jazz, and/or (a) Film in No Real Particular Order (Then Again, Maybe So)'
- Anahid Kassabian, 'Songstruck: rethinking identifications in romantic comedies'
- Anahid Kassabian, 'Ubiquitous Listening and Networked Subjectivity'
- Andrew L. Kaye, 'The Film Score and the African Musical Experience: Some comments on a work in progress'
- Victoria Large, Clouds and Scattered Sun: Kelly and Donen's It's Always Fair Weather'
- Jerrold Levinson, 'Film Music and Narrative Agency', in David Bordwell and Noël Carroll (eds.) , Post-Theory (via Google Books)
- William Lawrence McGinney, 'The Whole as a Result of its Parts: Assembly in Aaron Copland's Score for The Red Pony' (e-thesis)
- Brian McMillan, 'Complicitous Critique: Dancer in the Dark as Postmodern Musical'
- Patricia Mellencamp, 'Spectacle and Spectator: Looking Through the American Musical Comedy'
- Miguel Mera, 'Reap What You Sow: "Perfect Day" [Lou Reed, 1973] / Trainspotting' in Matthew Caley and Steve Lannin (eds), Pop Fiction: The Song in Cinema (via Google Books)
- Cory Messenger, 'Act naturally: Elvis Presley, the Beatles and "rocksploitation"'
- Tony Mitchell, 'Minimalist menace: The Necks score The boys'
- Mladen Milicevic, 'Film Sound Beyond Reality: Subjective Sound in Narrative Cinema'
- Niall Moody, 'Motion as the Connection Between Audio and Visuals'
- Scott Murphy, 'The Major Tritone Progression in Recent Hollywood Science Fiction Films'
- Ellen J. Nasto, 'Bernard Herrmann: An Annotated Index of Materials'
- Andrew Patrick Nelson, 'Notes and Thoughts on the use of popular songs in John Hughes Sixteen Candles (1984)' Part One
- Andrew Patrick Nelson, 'Notes and Thoughts on the use of popular songs in John Hughes Sixteen Candles (1984)' Part Two
- David P. Neumeyer, 'Schoenberg at the Movies: Dodecaphony and Film'
- Louis Niebur, 'Review of Kay Dickinson (ed.), Movie Music: The Film Reader'
- Offscreen Journal's 'Favourite Moments of Film Sound': Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind By: Jim Batcho; Patriot Games By: Aden Evens; The Jazz Singer By: Claudia Gorbman ; La Maman et la putain By: André Habib; The Haunting By: Thomas Phillips; Love is the Devil By: Martin Shingler; Stalker By: Donato Totaro; Tati, Hitchcock, Antonioni By: Elisabeth Weis; The Exorcist By: William Whittington ; The Wilhelm Scream By: Benjamin Wright.
- Offscreen Journal's 'Discourses on Diegesis': The Success Story of a Misnomer By: Henry M. Taylor; Diegetic Commentaries By: Martin F. Norden; Constructing the Diegesis in a Multi-Channel World By: Mark Kerins; Does Anybody Hear? By: Randolph Jordan; Acoustics of the Soul By: Randy Thom.
- Offscreen Journal's 'The State of the Art [on integration between sound and image]': Visual Music as Performing Art By: Fred Collopy; Synchronous Form In Visual Music By: Michael Betancourt ; On Sound and Image as a Single Entity By: Barry Spinello
- Ted Pigeon, 'On the Cinema of Music'
- Karyn Charles Rybacki and Donald Jay Rybacki, 'Cultural Approaches to the Rhetorical Analysis of Selected Music Videos'
- Hannu Salmi, 'Composing the past: music and the sense of history in Hollywood spectacles of the 1950s and early 1960s'
- Diana Sandars, 'Review of The Pop The Song in Cinema, edited by Matthew Caley and Steve Lannin'
- Tom Schneller, 'Death and Love: Bernard Herrmann's Score for Vertigo'
- Julia Schpinitskaya, 'Solaris by A. Tarkovsky: Musical-Visual Troping, Paradigmatism, Cognitive Stereoscopy'
- Linda Schubert, 'The Film Scores of Henry Vars in the United States: An Overview'
- Greg M. Smith, 'Streisand Shops the Museum Store: Consuming Art on Television'
- Jeff Smith 'The edge of seventeen: class, age, and popular music in Richard Linklater's School of Rock'
- Murray Smith, 'Music, Film, and Emotion'
- Robynn J. Stilwell, 'It May Look Like a Living Room…: The Musical Number and
the Sitcom' - Robynn J. Stilwell, 'Music in Films: A Critical Review of Literature, 1980-1996'
- Randy Thom, 'Designing a Movie for Sound [Soundscape: The School of Sound Lectures 1998-2001]'
- Gordon Thomas, 'Will the Shark Bite? G. W. Pabst and The Threepenny Opera'
- Boris Trbic, 'Norbert [Schultze], We Hardly Knew Ye: Rethinking the Late German Composer'
- Ben Turner, 'Acoustic Ambience in Cinematography: An Exploration of the Descriptive and Emotive Impact of the Aural Environment'
- Alan Vanneman, 'When Fred Met Red: Fred Astaire, Red Skelton, and Vera-Ellen Commingle in Three Little Words'
- Steve Vertlieb, 'Herrmann and Hitchcock: The Torn Curtain'
- Justin Vicari, 'Space Here We Come: P. J. Harvey's Please Leave Quietly Redefines the Concert Film DVD'
- James Wierzbicki, 'Review of Anahid Kassabian: Hearing Film'
- Ken Woodgate, '"Young and in love": music and memory in Leander Haussmann's Sun Alley'
- Bill Wrobel, 'The Nature of Bernard Herrmann's Music'
- Bill Wrobel, 'Herrmann Music in Have Gun Will Travel and Other Classic CBS Television Series'
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