Introduction of Color and Sound – Braanz (2024)

Part II

Maola Bakhsh Raisi

The author is passionate about the cinema and in this article, he writes about how color and sound were introduced to cinema.The piece was originally written in Baluchi. 

Color in Cinema

Although color entered the realm of cinema before sound, one wants to bring forward the various color effects that had been used in film since the invention of the medium. In the beginning, black-and-white were used to photograph and project two or more component images through different color filters. Later, subtractive color processes were introduced. These also used black-and-white film to photograph multiple color-filtered source images, but the final product was a multicolored print that did not require special projection equipment.

Color reproduction in the two-color “Technicolor” process was sufficient at first, but, because only two of the three primary colors were used, it was still not completely lifelike. Soon, Technicolor replaced it with a three-color system that employed the same basic principles but included all three primary colors.

Slowly and surelyalmost every color film made was produced by using Technicolor’s three color system. In the beginning, films were colored frame by frame. The filmmaker Georges Méliès made many of his colored films using the same technique. His most famous film, A trip to the moon was released both in black and white and in color, printed in hand.

In 1913, the black and white version survived Georges Méliès’ act of folly, when he attempted to burn his collection of film negatives. The color version was considered definitively damaged. In 1990sfollowing a film exchange with the Filmoteca de Catalunya, Lobster Films received the damaged color print and began the tedious task of peeling off and unrolling the nitrate prints to be able to digitize them. It took two years to extract the images fragments.Now, the colored print is also the part of my collection, and is available on YouTube for film enthusiasts.

In the mid-1900s, as films began to approach a single reel length, and more prints of each film were sold, mechanizedstenciling processes were introduced. A stencil was cut for each color and aligned with the print; color was then applied through the stencil frame by frame at high speeds.

During the 1910s, frame-by-frame stenciling was replaced by mechanized tinting and toning. Tinting colored all the light areas of a picture and was achieved by immersing a black-and-white print in dye or by using colored film base for printing. The toning process involved chemically treating film emulsion to color the dark areas of the print. Each process produced monochrome images, the color of which was usually chosen to correspond to the mood or setting of the scene. Occasionally, the two processes were combined to produce elaborate two-color effects. The Kodak introduced its own system of pre-tinted black-and-white film stocks called Sonochrome in 1929. The Sonochrome line featured films tinted in seventeen different colors.

Photographic color can be produced in films by using either an additive process or a subtractive one. The first systems to be developed and used were all additive ones, such as Charles Urban’s Kinemacolor (c. 1906) and Gaumont’s Chronochrome (c. 1912). They achieved varying degrees of popularity, but none was entirely successful, largely because all additive systems involve the use of both special cameras and projectors, which ultimately made them too complicated and costly for widespread industrial use.

One of the first successful subtractive processes was a two-color one introduced by Herbert Kalmus’s Technicolor Corporation in 1922. It used a special camera and a complex procedure to produce two separate positive prints that were then cemented together into a single print. The final print needed careful handling but could be projected by means of ordinary equipment. This “cemented positive” process was used successfully in such features as Toll of the Sea (1922) and Fairbanks’s The Black Pirate (1926). In 1928 Technicolor introduced an improved process in which two gelatin positives were used as relief matrices to “print” colour onto a single strip of film.

Sound in Cinema

As we know, first there was silent film and then there was sound. But that is not the whole story. Before films had spoken dialogue they still made themselves heard through inter titles and musical accompaniment. The key obstacleof audience perception of silent movies, however, was the technological difficulty of matching sound and visuals in such a way that everyone in the audience could hear. In other words, the problems were synchronization and amplification.

A sound film is a motion picture with synchronized sound, or sound technologically coupled to image, as opposed to a silent film. The first known public exhibition of projected sound films took place in Paris in 1900, but decades passed before sound motion pictures were made commercially practical. Reliable synchronization was difficult to achieve with the early sound-on-disc systems, and amplification and recording quality were also inadequate. Innovations in sound-on-film led to the first commercial screening of short motion pictures using the technology, which took place in 1923. It was made possible with the efforts of Thomas Edison’s device kinetophone through bringing together both kinetoscope and gramophone.

The primary steps in the commercialization of sound cinema started in the mid-to-late 1920s. At first, the sound films included synchronized dialogue, known as “talking pictures”, or “talkies”. They were exclusively shorts. The earliest feature-length movies with recorded sound included only music and effects. The first feature film originally presented as a talkie was The Jazz Singer, which premiered in October, 1927. Sound-on-film soon become the standard for talking pictures. In India, Alam Ara released in 1931 was India’s first full length sound film. The first Iranian talkie was the Dokhtare Lor (The Lor Girl) which was released in 1933. It was directed by Ardeshir Irani and interestingly enough, it was made in Mumbai, then known as Bombay.

Introduction of Color and Sound – Braanz (2024)

FAQs

What is the sound color theory? ›

Chromesthesia or sound-to-color synesthesia is a type of synesthesia in which sound involuntarily evokes an experience of color, shape, and movement. Individuals with sound-color synesthesia are consciously aware of their synesthetic color associations/perceptions in daily life.

What is the meaning of color in music? ›

What Is Tone Color? Tone color, also known as timbre, is the quality of a sound that is not characterized as frequency (pitch), duration (rhythm), or amplitude (volume).

What is a tone color? ›

Tone is a hue or mixture of pure colors to which only pure gray is added (equal amounts of black and white). Adding gray to a color will make the intensity much duller. Beware of mixing too much gray into a hue as it can become over-dulled and virtually impossible to restore the brilliance.

What is the best color for music? ›

Color seemed to best be tied to the tone or themes of the music. If the message was peaceful, greens and blues paired well. If the song was more angry, oranges and reds were more appropriate. Mysterious music had more tones of black, gray, and brown, etc.

What color theory explains? ›

Color theory is a concept used in visual arts and design that explains how colors interact with each other and how they can be combined to create certain feelings, moods, and reactions.

Does color affect sound? ›

For example, warm colors like red and yellow tend to reflect more sound, while cool colors like blue and green tend to absorb more sound. This can create different acoustic effects, such as reverberation, echo, or noise reduction.

What is the color of the sound in music? ›

In the world of music, the metaphor “the color of music” has been vastly used to describe characteristics of sound such as tone quality, pitch, and timbre. Timbre can be described as a mixture of frequencies including the fundamental pitch that makes up what we hear when music is played by a particular instrument.

What does colors the sound mean? ›

Each color of noise represents a different combination of frequencies and volumes along the spectrum of sound. So, when we say “colored noise,” we are essentially describing a sound that has a specific frequency pattern, and naming it after colors helps us visualize and remember these patterns more easily.

What is the relationship between music and colors? ›

Plato, Aristotle and Newton all found links between different musical tones and shades on the color spectrum. Because songs often carry specific emotional themes of optimism and energy, or nostalgia and regret, they may also create associations with very specific colors.

What is tone in sound? ›

Tone: Tone is defined as the sound which is recognized by its regularity of vibrations. A simple tone will have one frequency while a complex tone will have two or more simple tones known as overtones.

What is a value in color? ›

Value # Value could also be called “lightness.” It refers to how light or dark a color is. Lighter colors have higher values. For example, orange has a higher value than navy blue or dark purple. Black has the lowest value of any hue, and white the highest.

What is the structure of music? ›

Structure, or Form, in music refers to the arrangement and order of the parts or sections of the music.

Which color symbolizes music? ›

Barbiere et al. found that “gray” was associated with sadder music whereas “red,” “yellow,” “green,” and “blue” were associated with happier music (15), but only four musical selections were studied and, more importantly, no actual colors were presented in the selection task, but only words.

Is the sound of music in color? ›

The Sound of Music was filmed in Todd-AO by Ted McCord and produced with DeLuxe Color processing. Aerial footage was photographed with an MCS-70 camera.

What is color music code? ›

This system assigns a specific color to each note: C is Red, D is Orange, E is Yellow, F is Green, G is Light Blue, A is Dark Blue, and B is Purple.

What do different color noises mean? ›

Color noise, in the context of audio, refers to its power spectrum, which encompasses both its strength and the distribution of its frequencies. Sound reaches us in the form of waves, each with its own distinct characteristics.

What Colour is the sound? ›

Sound doesn't literally have color, but it has some VERY close analogies. Color is to light exactly what pitch and tone are to sound. Higher frequencies of light, analogous to high-pitched sound (treble), shift towards blue and violet.

What is the meaning of sound theory? ›

The theory of sound is firmly based in classical physics, in particular Newton's laws of motion, and most especially his second law, which relates force to acceleration through force = mass × acceleration. Newton developed a theory relating the velocity of sound to the compressibility and density.

References

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