The music is “America: The Artist’s Eye,” composed by Frank Lewin. It is available in a two-volume collection, Film Music By Frank Lewin, or as an individual MP3. The composition is the oxnly piece of music from America: The Artist’s Eye, a three-minute-long educational film produced in 1963 by the Westinghouse Broadcasting Co., that can be purchased in a high-quality format. “America: The Artist’s Eye,” which concludes the film, also happens to be the only piece of music that is not overlaid with the warbling voice of the female narrator, at once earthy and genteel. This narrator is Florence Eldridge, an actress born in Brooklyn and nominated for a Tony Award in 1957. Yet Eldridge’s accent seems oddly archival rather than regional, as if derived from the early American paintings pictured in the film, from scenes of blacksmith shops, impossibly edenic plantations, and cheerful boxing matches.
A 16mm print of America: The Artist’s Eye was found in an industrial storage cabinet in the Chestertown, Maryland, workshop of Frank B. Rhodes, furniture maker and grandson of Colonel Edgar William and Bernice Chrysler Garbisch. The Garbisches’ collection of American Naive art, collected over a period of forty years, is showcased in the film. America: The Artist’s Eye was made to encourage viewers to “visit your museum to see America through the eyes of our leading artists,” in Eldridge’s words.
Eldridge gamely announces a “look at our American past,” when “rustic artists showered the countryside” with “merry, sad, or decorative” works. I knew upon first viewing that the film had to be digitally preserved for further research. In the process, Lewin’s 16mm film composition was captured—a lossless record of an artifact (complete with any previous shifts in format and depletions of information). Meanwhile, the 256-Kbps iTunes MP3 of “America: The Artist’s Eye,” though technically compressed, was deemed lossless as well, the most faithful, high-fidelity representation of the composition that could be found.