Affichage des articles dont le libellé est music. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est music. Afficher tous les articles

12 décembre 2010

Celestial, bodies


But Mr. Hagelmayer. It's still not over.













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bodies moving: social interactions, humans inside houses inside villages, attempted loves.









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"György Eszter, a major character in the film, gives a monologue propounding a theory that Werckmeister's harmonic principles are responsible for aesthetic and philosophical problems in all music since, which need to be undone by a new theory of tuning and harmony."


03 janvier 2010

the real economy

"10) "Shuttin' Detroit Down" John Rich. On matter of national crisis and national shame, as usual, country shoots first. That doesn't mean one likes the aim (cf. Keith comma Toby), but there's something remarkable about how quick is the draw. In mid-November of 2008, the CEOs of Chrysler and GM arrived in Washington to request bailout money — in private jets. By January, the dwarfier half of Big & Rich had recorded this song. The chord progression's pretty prêt-a-porter, but it's hard not to be captivated by a song that draws its lexicon equally from talk radio (Wall Street vs. Main Street, etc) and from political economy, from whence it conjures with impressive clarity the distance between "the real economy" and finance: "pardon me if I don't shed a tear," runs the leadup to the chorus, "they're selling make-believe, and we don't buy that here." It's a wonder he doesn't mention fictitious capital. And then the chorus:
Cause in the real world they're shuttin' Detroit down
While the bossman takes his bonus pay and jets on outta town
DC's bailin' out them bankers as the farmers auction ground
Yeah while they're livin' it up on Wall Street in the New York City town,
Here in the real world they're shuttin' Detroit down.
...and then it goes into the specifics of retirement accounts! Equally remarkable for its subtlety and strangeness is the transfer that goes on almost unannounced, wherein the "real economy" is equated with the farmer who works the land — a core assumption of the genre, one might say — against the fancies of New York City bankers, but the opposite of Manhattan turns out to be not some agricultural scene, rather Motown. These places turn out to be fully swappable, because they are both the negative of fictitious capital. It's like he totally gets it about where value comes from. I mean really."
- jane dark

[watch this video:]

02 décembre 2007

I Don't Feel At Home In This World Anymore 1927-1948


Read this blurb:
I'm sorry, but any record that opens with a vintage rebetika track is pretty much sold for me, and since this record does, the rest doesn't really matter, it's already awesome. Yep the first track on this killer re-issue is from Marika Papagika and sets the pace (and standard) for the rest of the album, which is a showcase of music recorded in the USA between 1927 and 1948 but rooted in other cultures. So from the initial blast of gorgeous Greek folk, we're thrown into Calypso, Appalachian folk, Cajun, Gospel and even Chinese influenced folk music and every moment is as breathtaking as the last. This is a truly shocking collection of American primitive music and concentrates on the oft-ignored section of American culture, the immigration which has made it what it is today. In this we hear what shaped American music at this time and we can hear clues as to how it has influenced the development of what we hear from America now. This selection is just so important, from the instrumentation down to the sentiment behind the lyrics, giving a real focus on how secluded and ignored these people must have been feeling in their new 'home', and mirroring the journeys we read about time and time again. If you had any interest in the American Primitive series of compilations, or more importantly in the Nonesuch Explorer compilations, this strikes in a place where the two meet and is breathtaking from start to finish. Essential listening!
- a UK website that carried record
A vinyl-only release of 800 copies that's now out of print, this is too amazing not to share. Follow this link and click on "try it" to download mp3s and cover art. This is indeed essential.

25 juillet 2007

ambition, resources

"all of the material is so subtle as to appear pretty insubstantial at first. Epic modernist opera recorded on a low-fi 4-track basically."
- my friend Ben, on the early work of the band His Name Is Alive

Which pretty much sums up my approach to cinematic storytelling, actually.

13 mai 2007

Water Walk

I'm not sure how often people come to this site to see what's posted under "Other Readings," but that list is constantly being updated (it's a feed of Shared items from my Google Reader). Still, I think it would be a shame not to point out this video of John Cage performing on the game show I've Got A Secret.

28 mars 2007

Rear Window and "incidental" popular music



Eric Harvey's article The Soundtrack of Our Lives addresses Hitchcock's use of popular music as a narrative and thematic element in Rear Window.

Here's an excerpt:
"This highlights Hitchcock's approach to his audience: as passive viewers seeking manipulation and needing their strings pulled at just the right moments for maximum impact-- the same view he took toward the passive radio and record listeners in the film. Rear Window is arguably Hitchcock's most intellectual film; a biting, artful work of social comment on what he saw as a true horror-- the quickly creeping influence of mass culture on postwar urban American society, something which threatened his reputation as a master showman in the theatrical tradition."