Errikos, superb rant! Loved it.
Aren't we, each in our own way, reacting to "the decay of cinema", to use the title of Susan Sontag's article written for the NYT in 1996?[1] I've never been a follower of Sontag (Heaven forefend!), but that article caught my close attention recently and I find it insightful and prophetic.
And if it's true that cinema is in decay, then concert orchestral music must already be geriatric with one foot in the grave. Radio and gramophone records started devaluing orchestral concerts quite a while before tv started devaluing cinema.
Sontag used the term "cinephilia" as "the name of the very specific kind of love that cinema inspired", and made the point that no matter the size of our tv screen (and today I'd add no matter the number of 3D surround speakers we have in our 'home theatre'), it's just not the same as the whole cinema experience. "Cinema had apostles. (It was like a religion.) Cinema was a crusade. For cinephiles, the movies encapsulated everything. Cinema was both the book of art and the book of life."[ibid.]
Is it any wonder that interest, ambition and prowess among upcoming, aspiring film composers have waned accordingly? And what does that portend for the qualities of the many 'assistants' now in a film composer's studio and in a film production's music department? I dread to think of it.
Agitato, three points on the entertainment industry in general:
- Preponderance of narcs. Has it not been commonly understood for a very long time that the entertainment industry is a prime outlet for narcissists? And as if we needed that understanding to be corroborated academically, in 2006 a paper described the testing of 200 well known celebrities, using the Narcissistic Personality Inventory, and found that these people scored substantially higher (i.e. are substantially more narcissistic), compared to MBA graduates and the general population.[2] (Indeed Dr Phil McGraw recently mentioned an estimate of about 50% of people in the entertainment industry having Narcissistic Personality Disorder.) But what is perhaps much less well known is the way narcs tend to treat 'underlings' (see also Nietzsche's "untermenschen") as chattels, cattle or objects, without empathy or remorse - when not glowing with carefully faked charm, virtue, grace, politeness, etc, in the glare of limelight.
- "Assistant" syndrome. Back when management consultants were vaunting their 'wisdom' to the corporate world, I recall one piece of advice that struck me as highly valid. It was this:- don't give someone the official job title of "assistant" and then expect them and their boss to act properly and accountably. It's much too vague as a job title and can let in a host of unwelcome and counterproductive thinking and activity. It's better to have some implicit boundaries and responsibilites in the job title, as well as having them spelt out explicitly in the accompanying job definition.
- Narcs & "assistants" together. Narcs loathe and detest boundaries and accountability. A narc boss does not want any inhibitions or prohibitions on his feelings of entitlement to mistreat underlings in whatever ways his toxic volition desires. The narc strives to feel he is at the pristine centre of his idealised (yet actually horribly fragile and vulnerable) universe, with adulation, praise, credit and perks routed to him, whilst blame, discredit and dishonour are routed away to the 'chattels, cattle and objects'. Hence we find in the entertainment industry a great quantity of "assistants", because that suits the narcs' modus operandi. Some of these assistants no doubt are aspiring to become film composers or other kinds of artist in their own right; but they have little or no choice but to work within the current state of affairs (e.g. being treated as 'prey' by narcs), and will be obligated to put up with far more injustices and abuses than we outsiders would deem tolerable.
And so, whilst you call it a "sad" state of affairs, I regard it as a serious, stubbornly endemic sickness. And I believe it will get worse before it stands a chance of getting better - if it's ever going to get better. (E.g. has the Weinstein scandal lead to long-lasting prevention of "casting couch" atrocities? One can only hope so, because Tinseltown continues to keep the realities of its internal affairs cloaked in darkness whilst feeding PR BS to the outside world.)
It seems to me the sum of all the symptoms does not bode well for the film industry as a whole.
[1] "The Decay of Cinema", Susan Sontag, 1996, archive.nytimes.com
[2] "Narcissism and celebrity", S.M. Young & D. Pinsky, 2006, sciencedirect.com