interviewer unknown. In his characteristically stilted and uncooperative fashion Andy talks about his art, his films, his process and the Velvet Underground.
interviewer unknown. In his characteristically stilted and uncooperative fashion Andy talks about his art, his films, his process and the Velvet Underground.
Another interesting video from The School of Life, positing a secular view of the concept of “Higher Consciousness.”
“Comment te dire adieu” (English: “How to Say Goodbye to You”) is a French adaptation of the song “It Hurts to Say Goodbye“. It was recorded by Françoise Hardy in 1968 and remains one of Hardy’s most popular songs. Continue reading FRANCOISE HARDY :: COMMENT TE DIRE ADIEU? 1968
Don Cherry, pocket-trumpet, flute
Douss’ngouni, vocals
Giampiero Pramaggiore, guitar, flute, vocals
Nana Vasconcelos, berimbau, percussion, vocals
Moki Cherry, vocals, tamboura
Barbaralee Diamonstein-Spielvogel hosts a fascinating and outspoken conversation with Robert Motherwell. From the Video Archive in the Duke University Libraries.
Cyril Pahinui performing “Hi’ilawe” at the 6th Annual Gabby Pahinui Waimanalo Kanikapila held in honor of his father- Gabby “Pops” Pahinui.
Held at Waimanalo Beach Park the annual event was held under the pavilion because of the heavy rain in the morning.
Kanikapila is a style of Hawaiian music produced in an impromptu jam session, most commonly taking place at a beach, or family gathering. The term comes from kani which means sound. and pila which means any string instrument in the Hawaiian language.
A tough and beautiful live performance of William Tyler’s Country Of Illusion from 2013, at the Trumpet Blossom Cafe in Iowa City, Iowa. Many of Tyler’s pieces seem as much a meditation on the dissipation of the american mythos as a celebration of it. Bright, open american vistas replace each other on the horizon line, leaving room for the periodic emergence of a restrained raga/drone. In this performance, Tyler culminates his piece into a wall of reverberant rumblings and shimmering layers. The myth folds back in on itself and quakes in it’s own reflection. A wonderful, powerful ending. Continue reading WILLIAM TYLER :: COUNTRY OF ILLUSION, live at Trumpet Blossom Cafe, Iowa City, Iowa, 4.24.13
Big Star’s Thank You Friends is from their first album, the 1972 release, #1 Record. Alex Chilton, Chris Bell, Jody Stephens, and Andy Hummel formed the band in 1971.
“Alex Chilton was the lead singer for the blue-eyed soul group the Box Tops from 1967 to 1970, who scored a No. 1 hit with the song “The Letter” when he was sixteen. Following his stint with the Box Tops, he recorded a solo studio album. He was offered the role of lead vocalist for Blood, Sweat & Tears, but turned the offer down as “too commercial”. Chilton had known Chris Bell for some time: both lived in Memphis, each had spent time recording music at Ardent Studios, and each, when aged 13, had been struck by the music of the Beatles during the band’s 1964 debut US tour. A song Chilton wrote nearly six years after he first witnessed a Beatles performance, “Thirteen”, referred to the event with the line “Rock ‘n’ roll is here to stay”. Chilton asked Bell to work with him as a duo modeled on Simon & Garfunkel; Bell declined, but invited Chilton to a performance by his own band, Icewater, comprising Bell, drummer Jody Stephens, and bassist Andy Hummel. Attracted by Icewater’s music, Chilton showed the three his new song “Watch the Sunrise”, and was asked to join the band. Both “Watch the Sunrise” and “Thirteen” were subsequently included on Big Star’s first album, #1 Record. The now four-piece band adopted the name Big Star when one member was given the idea from a grocery store often visited for snacks during recording sessions. One of many Big Star Markets outlets in the Memphis region at the time, it had a logo consisting of a five-pointed star enclosing the words “Big Star”; as well as the store’s name, the band used its logo but without the word “Star” to avoid infringing copyright.”-wikipedia, Big Star Continue reading BIG STAR :: THANK YOU FRIENDS, 1972
Delusion of the Fury: A Ritual of Dream and Delusion, A Film by MadelineTourtelot, Recorded at UCLA Playhouse 1969. Conducted by Danlee Mitchell, musician assembly Emil Richards.
Delusion of the Fury is a stage play by the American composer Harry Partch. The first draft for a new theater work for singers, mimes, dancers, and musicians, Cry from Another Darkness, was completed by Partch on December 30, 1964, and the second draft, dated January 17, 1965, was a fuller, longer, re-titled Delusion of the Fury. The work was originally conceived as a play in two acts, with a dramatic first act and a comedic second. Partch completed writing of the music on March 17, 1966. The piece employs Partch’s original system of micro-tonality, and was written for the largest assembly of his custom-made instruments used in any of his works. The instruments were an important part of the stage set.[2] Delusion of the Fury was premiered at the UCLA Playhouse on January 9, 1969, where it was recorded for Columbia Records. This remained the only performance of the piece until it was re-staged in 2007 by the Japan Society in New York. In 2013 the piece was staged for the first time in Europe at Ruhrtriennale by Ensemble MusikFabrik under the direction of Heiner Goebbels.This production toured to the Edinburgh International Festival in 2014. It received another performance in Paris as part of IRCAM’s ManiFeste festival in the Grande Salle of La Villette on June 18, 2016. -wikipedia
Continue reading HARRY PARTCH:: DELUSION OF THE FURY, original filmed performance, 1969, 72 min.
Nels Cline and his band was filmed at Johnny Brenda’s in Philadelphia by Out Of Town Films in 2014.