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MHB listening
JA, codename jah neezy

Willingly or no, every artist who throws his hat in with another set of creatives becomes a part of a marketplace of ideas. The quality of that marketplace — the quality of ideas bandied about within it — will determine how much that artist can gain from his cohort. Here we find the basis of the classic fork: which has more value, the auteur or the collaboration? Film being, at its heart, a collaborative medium, there seems to be at every turn a marketplace among collaborators to be considered or skipped. Does one stop at the fruit vendor for a fresh grapefruit on the way home, or peruse the picked-over stack at the supermarket? Does one go fruitless, or make do with a can of Del Monte? Depending on the context, any one of these routes can lead to the proper nourishment of creativity.

It is the objective, as ever, that ideas forge themselves into bullets, that pages are laid to waste. It is the objective that rolls of film are exposed to light under the most explosive of conditions but that those conditions somehow undulate with mellifluous precision. If there were formulas for such things, the capture device could be represented by a sine wave cycling at 24Hz. But it is the director’s mind, its chaotic impulses, that must balance the equation.
 

I formulated my own directing style in my own head, proceeding without any unnecessary imitation of others…for me there was no such thing as a teacher. I have relied entirely on my own strength. [1]

–Yasujiro Ozu

 

[A]fter making The Motel, I had an awakening like Neo in the Matrix. All of sudden I saw all the numbers and codes that make up the world of filmmaking, but I don’t know if that is something you can teach. It is like a rite of manhood. You just have to go through it to understand it. You can prepare all you want, but there is that moment when you have to go in the woods alone, eat peyote and find a spirit animal and no book or teacher is going to be able to prepare you for that. [2]

–Michael Kang

 

always cool on set
 

Robert Mugge’s Sun Ra – A Joyful Noise is one of the best music documentaries you will ever see — masterfully and creatively shot (on film! One forgets that there was once no other way). In it, we are lucky enough to catch a glimpse of Ra directing a rehearsal while contending with the wayward personalities among his Arkestra (skip to 4:20 below). Throughout we hear the testimony of collaborators whose music becomes his music. For these collaborators, the quality of the marketplace itself becomes the reason for participation.
 

I said, “my gosh this man is more stretched out than Monk!” It’s unbelievable that anybody could write any meaner intervals than Monk or Mingus, you know, but he does. … So when I saw that, I said, “well I think I’ll make this the stop.” [3]

— Saxophonist John Gilmore

 
[ youtube video taken down ]
 

There is the hard hat and the axe. There is the pillow or the bag of weed. And always, the camera, the piano, the canvas. For the director, it is the objective that his desires unfurled shall carry him to broader vistas. Such is the hard work of his dreams. Such is the currency of the marketplace of ideas.
 


1. Ozu as famously quoted.
2. From RR interview with Kang; photo captured on the set of West 32nd.
3. From: Sun Ra – A Joyful Noise (60 min.). Dir. Mugge, 1980.
Buy it, steal it, or watch most of it for free here.


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paper plant
truck town

I managed to visit the town of Chillicothe, Ohio about eighteen months ago. The visit was part of a solitary three-day road trip that I made on the old post road, route 50, from Cincinnati to Washington, DC. In my dispatch, I focussed more on the relationship between photography and deserted places. I had not, in my short time there, spoken to a soul or had time to dig deeper into the causes behind what struck me as a forlorn, but visually arresting location. During the afternoon stroll I took through the town I found myself looking down the barrel of an idyllic tree-lined street; standing at its dead end I watched as two teen bikers approached. I knew that there would be time for one shot, one shot only.

The question, as they approached: should I shoot directly down the street and capture all of its small town goodness, perhaps using the approaching subjects as props in my Life Magazine portrait of the town? Or should I focus on the subjects themselves — two teens I had seen biking through the parking lot of a supermarket earlier — and put on hold any notion of capturing a postcard image? As I settled into a shooting crouch, the teens focussed their attention on me and the decision became fused with the moment.

“What’s he looking at?” I heard one ask the other. They looked toward me as they began to round the corner.

Zoom in tighter. Pan with them. Hold. Hold. Wait for it. Boom.

“Oh, he’s looking at us.”

I could feel the crest of their expectations wash away upon the realization. They completed rounding the corner and rode away, their minds drifting back to more important topics.
 

hip hop lives

I bring this up because Chillicothe has made its way into the news, as I suppose it does every election cycle. 60 Minutes journalist Steve Kroft paints a more complete and entirely different image of the town vis-a-vis the Democratic nominating fight currently being waged on its streets. And though I was pleased to see the CBS news cameras trained on some of the same locations I had photographed, it is the picture of an American eletorate, very much in flux, that emerges from the news piece. At this moment, many more eyes are clearly trained on Chillicothe.
 

—
Here are the rest of my Chillicothe shots.

It didn’t help with the bikers, but two days later I learned about the burst function on my camera while sitting on the front bumper of a fire truck at a county fair tractor pull contest in Virginia. The camera does video as well.


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chicken or egg?

Access is that most elusive quality that is granted to some who wield cameras. The best seem to command it of their subjects instantly, effortlessly. The rest of us work for every scrap we can get and hire the best camera people to buttress ourselves. Perhaps as a cheat, a short-circuit, we who shoot things with cameras for a living decide to use our friends as subjects from time to time. It is simply too enticing not to do.
 

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After two more decisive victories by Sen. Obama in the race for the Democratic nomination, making it ten in a row, WaPo and NYT bloggers both ran stories about the Clinton campaign’s strategy (6-point plan! 8-point plan!). The strategy, evidently, is to disavow losses and attack viciously, the party be damned. I’m not sure what is more dispiriting, the rise of bitter, divisive politics so early in the campaign or the media’s inability to understand a transformed electorate. In nearly 300 comments on one such article, one would be pressed to find even 10 percent in support of HRC. This is not to say that she is without her ardent supporters, but that many often fall outside of the educated, often-affluent and blog-savvy generations that form the bulk of the readership. These readers, not privy to conference calls from either campaign, seem to grasp kernels of common-sense in the race that have thus far eluded many of the people employed to cover it.

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Far be it for the New York Times to notice, but Barack Obama swept weekend contests in Maine, Louisiana, Nebraska and Washington State winning a Grammy along the way. Oh and by the way his music video is #1 on youtube. And who has better supporters?

 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kica8hmSdAM


hat tip to JA for the link.


© 2006 – 2025 Raafi Rivero.