This video for Bjork’s “Wanderlust” is so awesome. Here, on the New York Times websites, she and the directing team, Encyclopedia Pictura, talk about the video:
Created by youtube user: rc10t3
From Video Description:
“Dynamic Phrase Synthesizer.
The next innovation in the highly acclaimed line of Korg DJ tools has arrived!
The KAOSSILATOR is a new pocket sized instrument that packs Korg’s world renowned synth sound along with innovative performance features into an ultra-compact unit. Anyone can instantly play musical phrases by simply tapping or sliding their finger across the KAOSSILATOR’s touch pad — no previous skills required! The KAOSSILATOR is a portable, travel friendly device that runs on batteries, so you can have fun creating music anywhere your life takes you, with seemingly endless possibilities.”
Also see this album of music called the Yellow Album made entirely with the Kaossilator.
My hometown, Kamloops, population 85,000 people, is having its annual film festival now. By the time these films come to Kamloops, they’re all pretty much available on DVD already, but what a treat it is to see these films on the silver screen. I couldn’t pass on seeing Control.
How awesome Control is, directed by Anton Corbijn, telling the story of the last few years of the life of Ian Curtis, singer of the band Joy Division.
The film is a first feature for Corbijn, who has had a career photographing bands (including Joy Division) since the 1970s, and has had much success making music videos from the early 1980s until the present.
He brings such control to Control, which the characters of the film can’t escape from. They seem trapped by the shadows, by the brick, by the wallpaper, by the black & white, by their bodies and their minds. The antithesis of this control is the epilepsy of the main character Curtis. As I recall, there’s only two or three scenes in the whole movie which actually leave the city — the scene where the young Curtis proposes to his girlfriend, the scene where the band is driving back from London and he has a seizure on the side of the motorway at night, and the awesome final shot of the movie, which pans up from the church, and black smoke is expelled from the chimney, and the distant hills are seen. It’s a release.
How intense the movie is. And how intense the music is.
When I’m snorkeling, I love that shift in view when you break the surface of the water, going from water to air, or air to water. I love swimming underwater facing up to the sky, seeing the clouds warped by the water. This video is really nothing more than a play with these fascinations. The music is provided by Seafran (check his music at myspace.com/seafran). The video is by DoAn Forest. (forest.efeele.com)
A photo remix by DoAn Forest. Original photo series by Youki Cropas. Birds fly from Istanbul, Turkey to Seoul, Korea. Along the way, they interfere with the signals of lovelorned Chinese, Korean TV models, and Russian wrestlers. All set a soundtrack that only Bulgakov’s devil would recognize.