Monday, March 31, 2008
Lacan speaks
How different theory classes would be if, along with texts, one also studied from films and videos the theorists' facial features, expressions, gestures, and delivery, not to mention their cravattes.
Amen
A dissertation on a drum loop. Feel free to turn it off about three quarters of the way through, before it gets to the message.
Monday, March 24, 2008
Someone's cute newborn and Raymond Scott's "Lullaby"
Same baby, not long after, with a piece of music that I can't quite recognize. A pretty stunning clip, actually (read Roland Barthes' Camera Lucida and mentally transfer it to video in the age of YouTube):
Electrofunk 101
Afrika Bambaataa's "Planet Rock":
Source for the melody sample:
Source for the beat sample:
Yes, I know this is really obvious. But it's a good excuse to hear again three great songs.
Source for the melody sample:
Source for the beat sample:
Yes, I know this is really obvious. But it's a good excuse to hear again three great songs.
Saturday, March 22, 2008
D.C. LaRue: Cathedrals
A 2008 video (well, barely), starring Mr. LaRue himself, for the great 1976 song:
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Thursday, March 13, 2008
The absolute pinnacle of progressive rock
Magma, June 29th, 1970:
You'll have to turn the volume way up on this one, but it's worth it.
You'll have to turn the volume way up on this one, but it's worth it.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Powerhouse!
As performed by the Raymond Scott Quintette:
(Notice the weird dancing lights)
As performed by six guys with harmonicas:
And as someone's pretty cool abstract animation project:
(Notice the weird dancing lights)
As performed by six guys with harmonicas:
And as someone's pretty cool abstract animation project:
Violins and Helicopters
Stockhausen's Helicopter String Quartet:
I love the landscape they're flying through. And doesn't it seem that, in using helicopters, Stockhausen was taking dead aim at Wagner (via "Apocalypse Now")?
I love the landscape they're flying through. And doesn't it seem that, in using helicopters, Stockhausen was taking dead aim at Wagner (via "Apocalypse Now")?
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
John Cage, contestant on "I've Got a Secret," 1960
Probably my favorite clip that I've posted so far.
Sunday, March 9, 2008
The Music of Ezra Pound
Literally. Violin solo by Pound, attempting "to set the speech rhythms of a poem by Guido Cavalcanti to music." Better than many a piece by real composers.
And the music of Pound's verse (and voice and, if I'm not mistaken, tympani):
And the music of Pound's verse (and voice and, if I'm not mistaken, tympani):
Saturday, March 8, 2008
From Jean Renoir's "The River" (1951)
One of the most beautiful movies ever made.
(Renoir reputedly had some of the tree leaves painted to get just the right kind of green on film. It was his first color movie, after all.)
And the great Radha's dance:
(Renoir reputedly had some of the tree leaves painted to get just the right kind of green on film. It was his first color movie, after all.)
And the great Radha's dance:
Beethoven, String Quartet op. 131
in C# minor, first movement, Adagio ma non troppo e molto espressivo. Budapest Quartet, 1943:
Whoever uploaded this to youtube also uploaded about seven other performances of the same movement. This one's my favorite, but follow the links and judge for yourselves.
Whoever uploaded this to youtube also uploaded about seven other performances of the same movement. This one's my favorite, but follow the links and judge for yourselves.
Friday, March 7, 2008
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Yves Klein Anthropometries (1960)
And one with music (Stravinsky) and commentary by art critic Pierre Restany:
Stalker
First Tarkovsky movie I saw, at thirteen or fourteen. Left me completely baffled, which I found incredibly artistically exciting. I remember walking out of the theater (it was daylight still, so it must have been a daytime showing), and talking about it at length with my dad (and with someone else, I don't remember who--a family friend?), without coming to any definitive conclusions.
Greatest opening shot ever
To redeem myself after the last post. I remember watching this movie for the first time when I was about fourteen or so. It completely changed everything I thought about film, or about art in general.
Raul Ruiz, Le temps retrouvé
I was looking for some clip from "Les trois couronnes du matelot" or "l'hypothése du tableau volé." Couldn't find it, but this is beautiful too:
Big Leggy
I wanted to embed this (which made me very happy when I found it), but it's been disabled:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m77fRcLWX-I
You'll just have to make do with the original version:
And you're welcome!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m77fRcLWX-I
You'll just have to make do with the original version:
And you're welcome!
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