Blacklit Industrial From Maceo Plex: “Mutant Disco”
Prototype
One cannot simply write a review of Blake Williams’s immersive, hypnotic experimental film Prototype (2017). It is more appropriate to comment on this film as the description of an experience. Whether taken in as a 3D experience or as a standard, 2D film, Protoype attempts to create an environment with the very idea of cinema itself. Cinema in its most primal form is a collection of images, rushing one after the other, weaving a tapestry. Williams’s work has a kinship with the early avant-garde cinema which experimented with the marriage of image and narrative, producing works which today have a dreamlike intensity. This intensity comes from the passage of time, because now these films can feel like a transmission from some other age or world. Herman G. Weinberg’s 1931 “film poem,” Autumn Fire, is such a film, with its silent black white imagery of nature, a wandering man in silhouette, a daydreaming woman and breezy waters. As modern pop culture came to be in the 1960s, artists like Andy Warhol would push the very boundaries of what cinema as an art form even meant. His 7-hour Empire is simply one still shot of the Empire State Building. [Read more…]
Chance The Rapper’s Rippling “All Night”
(Feat. Knox Fortune)
Cash And Ass In Anderson .Paak’s “Bubblin”
From the new release, Bubblin
Directed by Calmatic
Childish Gambino Takes Aim In “This Is America”
on RCA
New Work From Young Fathers: “Wow”
Arctic Monkeys’ Lavish Bowie-esque “Star Treatment”
David Bowie’s Glorious “Sweet Thing / Candidate”
In tandem with Angelica Villa’s review of the wonderful Brooklyn Museum exhibition, David Bowie is, here’s a dark suite set to a deep back-cabin mood. David Bowie is, by the way, is by no means dark, but Bowie had that lovely netherworld strain which, for those predisposed to the condition, felt viral and thereby one with all high occasions — sonic theater at its most operatic and sublime:
Connan Mockasin’s “Forever Dolphin Love”
The Erol Alkan Rework
From the Reworks Volume 1 release
on Phantasy Sound
Wajatta’s Infectious “Synchronize”
From their new release Casual High Technology
First Reformed
There can be nothing more dangerous than an awakened consciousness. Paul Schrader’s new and fierce work, First Reformed (2017), is a portrait of a man connecting with a world in crisis, even as he is silently torn by his own scars. Beautifully composed, it is a film that reaches well beyond the surface of its story. It is about the very condition and mood of our times, and the palpable sense of some oncoming cataclysm.
We are but individuals operating within the larger panorama of societies and nations. Some of us are bond strong by belief systems; others despair within their beliefs at a world symbolically ready to burn. Paul Schrader has been a filmmaker of the latter ilk since his early days when he composed furious, violent works which, even when featuring traditional plots, displayed an artist grappling with the spirit and the flesh. [Read more…]
Lovely Space And Lingering Strays In “Allocate”
New Work From Urulu: “Mellow Yellow”
From the Mushroom Valve EP
on Voyage Recordings
Die Antwoord’s Fabulous “Baby’s On Fire”
Directed by NINJA and Terence Neale
New Speed-Smack Philo-Rant From Cut Chemist: “Die Cut (Wrap)”
Featuring Myka 9 & Deantoni Parks
on A Stable Sound
New Work From Black Milk: “Laugh Now Cry Later”
From the Fever release:
Kendrick Lamar’s Pre-Pulitzer, “untitled 06 l 06.30.2014.”
In salute to Kendrick Lamar’s historic Pulitzer Prize for DAMN.; this isn’t from DAMN. (ha ha!), but it points nevertheless to some high Lamarian sound. From the untitled unmastered release. Featuring CeeLo Green:
on Aftermath/Interscope
From Blonde, Frank Ocean’s “Pink + White”
Featuring Beyoncé
Directed by Mikhail Mutskyi
Blonde, on Boys Don’t Cry Records
Henrik Schwarz’s “Leave My Head Alone, Brain”
Mix 1
on Sunday Music