Sinopsis
A blog and/or podcast about what goes on in the mind of a silent film accompanist before, during and after playing for a show. Hear reports from shows, insights on how to approach silent film scoring, plus live performance recordings.
Episodios
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ep. 69: Back to Charlie Chaplin and Harold Lloyd
01/08/2025 Duración: 49minBen and Kerr talk about Ben's recent shows in the Adirondacks and NYC, his in-progress recording of scores for a new Arbuckle Blu-ray set, the art and craft of a venue's developing an audience for silent films, accompanying Chaplin's "The Kid" (1921) and Harold Lloyd's "The Freshman" (1925), and Ben's managing being able to practice or rehearse; also updates on his book "The Silent Film Universe", a new Blu-ray release of NJ-made silents, and upcoming shows in August.. Show notes for episode 69 can be found here.
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ep. 68: “The Silent Film Universe” mini-episode
31/05/2025 Duración: 25minBen and Kerr talk about Ben's new book "The Silent Film Universe" on this mini-episode. Ben discusses the various aspects of silent film language covered in each chapter and how we as viewers are engaged with them, his own development and honing of the ideas in the book, and his rationale for writing and publishing the book. The publication date for "The Silent Film Universe" is June 17, 2025, and can be purchased in paperback and hardcover wherever you buy books. There is information about "The Silent Film Universe" – as well as endorsement quotes and ordering links – on the book's web page. Show notes for episode 68 can be found here.
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ep. 67: Scoring Wallace Reid in Kansas, Maurice Tourneur at MoMA, and “Ramona” for Kino Lorber
24/04/2025 Duración: 59minIn this episode, Ben and Kerr talk about accompanying a rare Wallace Reid Film “The Valley of the Giants” and other films at the Kansas Silent Film Festival; playing for the newly restored “The White Heather” and for Francis Ford’s “The Craving” (both 1919) at MoMA’s “To Save and Project” festival; creating a new theatre organ score for “Ramona” (1928) which will be released in May by Kino Lorber; Ben’s returning to the TCM Classic Film Festival to live-score a silent film – this year it’s Harold Lloyd in “The Freshman” – and more. Show notes for episode 67 can be found here.
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ep. 66: Catching up on live shows from the 2nd half of 2024
31/12/2024 Duración: 52minIn this episode, Ben and Kerr talk about: Ben's accompanying a rare Reginald Denny feature, sight-unseen, at Capitolfest 21; the rediscovery of "The Gorilla" (1927) and accompanying it on both piano and on theatre organ; Ben tries a new approach to underscoring the house-fall in Buster Keaton's "Steamboat Bill, Jr." (1928); the challenges and concerns in approaching the live-scoring of sound-era films like the 1931 "Dracula" and "Frankenstein"; Ben's accompanying of "Her Wild Oat" (1927) starring Colleen Moore, and his initiative to renew interest in the 2010's restoration of this film. Show notes for episode 66 can be found here.
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ep. 65: Scoring Roland West’s “The Bat” (1926)
30/12/2024 Duración: 45minIn this episode: On this episode, Ben and Kerr talk about Ben's process for scoring Roland West's "The Bat" (1926) for a home video release. The new restoration was produced and released by Ben's Undercrank Productions home video label. Show notes for episode 65 can be found here.
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ep. 64: The Fierce Urgency of Silent Film Music
26/07/2024 Duración: 01h10minIn this episode: Ben talks about accompanying Laurel & Hardy's pie fight in "The Battle of the Century", for a decisive moment for Keaton's character in "Steamboat Bill, Jr.", for Ozu's "A Story of Floating Weeds", and for Raymond Griffith and Max Fleischer silents at the 15th TCM Classic Film Festival. Performance clips include recordings from shows at the Strand Theatre in Schroon Lake NY, the Strand Theatre in Plattsburgh, and at the Museum of Modern Art in NYC. Show notes for episode 64 can be found here.
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ep. 63: Scoring Decisions and Transitions
07/05/2024 Duración: 43minIn this episode: Ben recaps his month's activities in March 2024, talks about the subtleties of underscoring dramatic moments when a main character thinks through an important decision, a creative way to invent main themes for a program of 7 animated shorts, accompanying a 1914 "Italian Diva" melodrama, and picking up on something about the film from its spoken introduction that affected the score created during the show; plus live-performance excerpts from scores for "Shoes" (1916) by Lois Weber at NYU, a restored Koko the Clowns cartoon at MoMA, and "Sangue Bleu" (1914) at Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò; and more. Show notes for episode 63 can be found here.
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ep. 62: accompanying a Mary Pickford film on campus, Marcel Perez at the Silent Clowns, Monta Bell at MoMA, and more
22/02/2024 Duración: 51minIn this episode: Ben accompanies Tom Mix in "Sky High" at the Library of Congress, adapting for organ some themes he originally composed for piano; Ben and Kerr discuss the importance of seeing silents with live music, and how a film may play one way when watched alone and completely differently at a show; Ben and Kerr discuss the hilarious and gifted silent film comedian Marcel Perez; Ben covers an upcoming Blu-ray/DVD release from Undercrank Productions; discussion of the newly restored "Man, Woman and Sin" screened at MoMA in January; news about upcoming shows, and more. Show notes for episode 62 can be found here.
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ep. 61: Improvising Themes for Re-Use and Development
31/12/2023 Duración: 59minIn this episode: Ben shares his experiences accompanying the silent era blockbuster "The Big Parade", the rare Italian film "A' Santanotte", Laurel & Hardy shorts, and others; he and Kerr discuss the practices of creating leitmotifs on the fly during a show, and then repeating them later in the film's score; there's some deep info and history on the different pianos at MoMA, and how the feel of playing these pianos – and the many others Ben encounters in his work – affect his playing and live-scoring; Ben's New Year's resolution for his silent film accompaniments (with a nod to Akira Kurosawa); and more. Show notes for episode 61 can be found here.
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ep. 60: Music on the Road: Late Summer – Autumn 2023
16/11/2023 Duración: 01h02minIn this episode: accompanying several films at MoMA in August of new restorations and a series of early color process silents; audience response difference between San Francisco Silent Film Festival and MoMA screening, and how this affected Ben's score in NYC; Ben talks about pivoting when presented before a show with a change of running time or of musical instrument; audience laughs during the climax of Harold Lloyd's "Safety Last"; accompanying a film where only way to preview was by reading trade reviews; live recording excerpts from "Loves of Casanova" at MoMA, "Safety Last" in Schroon Lake, "Second Fiddle" at Capitolfest, and "The Mark of Zorro" at the Williams Center in NJ; and more. Show notes for episode 60 can be found here.
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ep. 59: San Francisco Silent Film Fest, Undercrank’s 10th Anniversary, Tom Mix, and More
28/08/2023 Duración: 48minIn this episode: Ben talks about preparing for his performance at the San Francisco Silent Film Festival, his first time at the fest; his Undercrank Productions home video label celebrates its 10th anniversary in 2023; Ben talks about the two newly restored Tom Mix silent films that were released by Undercrank on Blu-ray in July; he shares some tips and insights on having music light on the piano at different venues, some thoughts about scoring a few different scenes from Harold Lloyd's "Safety Last"; and…don't click away during the wrap-up, or you'll miss a nice surprise at the end of the episode. Show notes for episode 59 can be found here.
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ep. 58: “Potato Salad”, TCM Classic Film Festival, Ernie Kovacs, Undercrank Prods 10th Anniversary
01/06/2023 Duración: 01h03minIn this episode: Ben talks about doing double-duty as both silent film accompanist and Blu-ray producer-distributor; Ben talks about accompanying "Clash of the Wolves" starring Rin-Tin-Tin at the TCM Classic Film Festival and the differences between this performance and the one of recording a score for this film, along; Kerr and Ben talk about the upcoming Ernie Kovacs book "Ernie in Kovacsland", and Kerr takes a real deep dive into the history and recordings of "Die Moritat", known to Kovacs fans as the music heard during the comedian's "oscilloscope" gag sequences; Ben talks about the 10th anniversary of his first DVD release, about starting what became his homevideo label Undercrank Productions, and about he's celebrating; musical performance excerpts are heard from a show for Kindergarteners, and from a recent performance on piano accompanying "Wings". Show notes for episode 58 can be found here.
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ep. 57: Recording silent film scores for Tom Mix and Rin Tin Tin
13/04/2023 Duración: 01h01minIn this episode: Ben and Kerr discyss about Ben's process for creating and recording silent film scores for home-video releases, and how it differs from scoring a silent in performance. Ben talks about composing by using the start-stop possibilities of recording in place of traditional notation, as well as using underscoring to help audiences register certain kinds of transitions or to grasp subtleties in the mood or intent of certain kinds of scenes. Recording examples includes segments from Tom Mix in "The Best Bad Man", recently restored by the Museum of Modern Art,; Tom Mix in "Sky High"; newly restored by Undercrank Productions; and "Clash of the Wolves" starring Rin Tin Tin, newly restored by Kino Lorber, aired on TCM and also presented at the TCM Classic Film Festival. Show notes for episode 57 can be found here.
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ep. 56: Back to scoring silent feature films
21/02/2023 Duración: 58minIn this episode: Ben and Kerr talk about the current theme music for the podcast and its impending replacement; Ben talks about playing for a recent screening of the newly restored Chaney film "The Unknown" and how he musically meets the issues of possible inadvertent laughter in this and other silent dramas; Ben and Kerr discuss Ernie Kovacs' use of music in Kovacs' commercials for Dutch Masters cigars; Ben talks about a scoring films with extensive WWI battle sequences, how these utilize a 1910s form of silent film's visual language and how this can affect scoring these scenes; plus news about other recent and upcoming shows, and live performance clips from "The Unknown" (at MoMA) and "Wings" (at the Library of Congress). Show notes for episode 56 can be found here.
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ep. 55: Music for unconventional silent films and other purposes
24/01/2023 Duración: 52minIn this episode: Ben talks about scoring silent films that lack a traditional narrative – films made for educational purposes – and creating music that is more "visual" than what is usually done for silents; films discussed are the 1922 "Making of a Bronze Statue" and the 1970 "Spirals" produced by the Metropolitan Museum of Art; Ben has been hired to score these and others for the Met's online "From the Vaults" series; also covered are the live-scoring of polar exploration silent films shown at the Stumfilmdager (Silent Film Days) festival in Tromsø, Norway, and the accompanying of college graduates receiving their diplomas at Radio City Music Hall; Ben talks about creating and recording musical motifs, transitions and underscore for the streaming children's program "Danny Joe's Tree House". Show notes for episode 55 can be found here.
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ep. 54: playing different theatre or pipe organs at shows in Oct & Nov 2022
20/12/2022 Duración: 01h03minIn this episode: Ben talks about the fun and challenges of playing a number of different organs at silent film shows during October and November in Ocean Grove NJ, Ursinus College in PA, and at the historic Everett Theatre in Delaware; Ben and Kerr discuss how often to use leitmotivs and some techniques Ben uses to create themes before or during a show; Ben talks about the sixth sense silent film accompanists develop and use to sense an audience's engagement with a silent film during a screening; plus some thoughts on Lois Weber's direction of "Shoes" (1916), meeting a Silent Comedy Watch Party fan at a show, using a Zoom digital recorder for show recordings, and more. Show notes for episode 54 can be found here.
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ep. 53: underscoring “Frankenstein” (1931), leitmotifs and how often to use them, listener questions, and more.
24/11/2022 Duración: 01h02minIn this episode: Ben reflects on his conversation with William Perry heard in the previous two episodes of the podcast; discusses how considering a show's intended audience is part of his programming process; covers the different film options for Halloween shows; talks at length about his recent live-underscoring of the 1931 "Frankenstein" at the Library of Congress, incl. multiple examples recorded during the show; shares a few minutes of his pipe organ accompaniment for Harold Lloyd's "The Freshman" at South Dakota State University; answers listener questions, and more. Show notes for episode 53 can be found here.
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ep. 52: William Perry interview (part 2) – MoMA, Lillian Gish, composing orchestrally for piano, and more.
19/10/2022 Duración: 59minIn this episode: Ben interviews composer, silent film pianist and television producer William Perry. Perry is probably best-remembered for his scores for the now-legendary television series "The Silent Years", produced by Paul Killiam, that ran for two seasons on public television, in 1971 and 1975. For twelve years Perry was the music director and composer-in-residence at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In the second part of this interview, Perry talks about his work as MoMA's full-time silent film accompanist, his friendship with Lillian Gish, how he approached composing his "Silent Years" scores, how he orchestrated them for symphonic performances and recordings in later years, his decision to leave MoMA and film accompaniment, his serving as producer and composer for series of Mark Twain films for PBS, and more. The 1st half of the interview was posted in September 2022. Show notes for episode 52 can be found here.
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ep. 51: William Perry interview (part 1) – “The Silent Years”, MoMA, and more.
27/09/2022 Duración: 51minIn this episode: Ben interviews composer, silent film pianist and television producer William Perry. Perry is probably best-remembered for his scores for the now-legendary television series "The Silent Years", produced by Paul Killiam, that ran for two seasons on public television, in 1971 and 1975. For twelve years Perry was the music director and composer-in-residence at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In the first part of this interview, Perry talks about his impressive musical background, how he became MoMA's full-time silent film accompanist, the origins of the "Silent Years" shows, and more. The 2nd half of the interview will be posted in October 2022. Show notes for episode 51 can be found here.
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ep. 50: Serial Queens, Kovacs Music Videos, and the Charming Raymond Griffith
20/08/2022 Duración: 01h01minIn this episode: Ben accompanies a bunch of shows of silent serials during June, and talks about the musical challenges of accompanying serials and in scoring an entire program of them; Kerr and Ben continue their conversation about Ernie Kovacs's use of music, and discuss Kovacs' "Street Scene" video of Bartok's "Concerto For Orchestra", and for music by Stravinsky, Karajev and Esquivel; Ben gives a progress update on his new book "The Silent Film Universe"; Kerr and Ben talk about silent film comedian Raymond Griffith, and Ben discusses the nuances of accompanying a comedian whose humor is more personality-based than others. Show notes for episode 50 can be found here.