In this Sherlock Holmes opening scene the music is orchestral and gloomy. It makes the scene of what is going on in it and sets the whole opening scene. When it hits a 0:15 the music starts to get a bit more aggressive and you can hear the different instruments and a lot more intense music is starting to play.The music and sound in the Sherlock Holmes opening scene has a lot going on in it so it is quite noisy and would draw the person watching this shows attention.
The non diegetic - In the Sherlock Holmes clip of the opening scene it has Diegetic sound in it. It has objects that make sound which kind of explains what is going on in the clip. When i was reviewing this clip i did spot a lot of diegetic sound in the clip, it was creating a kind of meaning to what is going on in the scene.
The only thing i couldn't find in the clip when listening to it was the voice of the characters the whole 1 minute clip just consumed of music and that was it really, it did not have any of the people in the actual video speaking in there.
Music that i can hear
Horse noises
Gun shots
A whip
A person breathing
A crow
Glass and wood being broken
A crow
In the diegetic i can hear a horse chasing after the horse, as this all went on the music began to get louder and everything started to get faster. When things like this happen in the scene it all starts to get intense.
Glossary
Diegetic - Sound source that is visible on the screen or whose source is implied to be present by the action.
Non - Diegetic - Sound whose source is neither visible on the screen nor has been implied to be present in the action
Ambient - Background sound used to create atmosphere
SFX - is a linking technology that facilitates context-sensitive linking between various web resources, and allows libraries to combine electronic resources to function as a cohesive, one-stop reference system.
Mood
Tone - a musical or vocal sound with reference to its pitch, quality, and strength.
Genre - a style or category of art, music, or literature.
Theme music - is a piece that is often written specifically for a radio program, television program, video game or movie, and usually played during the intro, during title sequence and/or ending credits. If it is accompanied by lyrics, most often associated with the show, it is theme song
Voiceover - a piece of narration in a film or broadcast, not accompanied by an image of the speaker.
Music Score - It is the script for the musicians on the film. (post-production)
Synchronous sound - is matched to certain movements occurring in the scene e.g when footsteps correspond to feet walking
Contrapuntal - music that is the opposite of what you see on screen eg. a romantic song played during a violent murder
Silence - complete absence of sound
Selective sound - he removal of some sounds and the retention of others to make significant sounds more recognisable, or for dramatic effect.
sound bridges - When the scene begins with the carry-over sound from the previous scene before the new sound begins.
Mood - Happy music or sad music, could go with the story of the film.
Ambient - relating to the immediate surroundings of something.
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