Released in 1972, 1974, and 1990 respectively, Francis Ford Coppola's
three-part saga is one of the greatest artistic accomplishments (and
financial successes) in the history of Hollywood cinema. The latest in
Scarecrow's Film Score Guides series, Nino Rota's The Godfather Trilogy:
A Film Score Guide discusses the events that led to the realization of
the three films and studies and analyzes their music. Sciannameo
reexamines The Godfather Trilogy from a variety of perspectives, with
special focus on the music Rota composed to bind together approximately
nine hours of cinematic narrative. Probing Rota's formation as a
musician amidst the cultural climate established by Italian Fascism,
Sciannameo examines Rota's initial stylistic adherence to the
Mussolini-dictated or inspired concept of Italianness and then his
return to a more congenial 19th-century formulaic vocabulary. Sciannameo
considers Rota's involvement with cinema and his collaboration with many
celebrated directors, such as Luchino Visconti, Federico Fellini, Franco
Zeffirelli, and Coppola, and deals with the sensitive issues of cultural
analysis vis-à-vis the Mafia as a concept embedded within the
Italian-American community. The book also discusses the sound of the
Godfather films, describing and analyzing the musical subtexts
underscoring a group of pivotal scenes. Relying substantially on Rota's
notes, which are discussed here for the first time, the book reveals the
composer's interpretation of Coppola's cinematic narrative and the
scoring methodologies he employed.