Название: American Music Documentary
Автор: Benjamin J. Harbert
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Музыка, балет
Серия: Music/Interview
isbn: 9780819578020
isbn:
The final image of Jagger, frozen with a slow zoom, passes the sense of scrutiny to the audience. The cartoonish invitation to look with simulated scrutiny at Jagger conflates our concern for blame with those of the band and the filmmakers. The complexity of the event stands firm. The real details of the media-entertainment apparatus are stronger than the ambiguity of a concert pseudoevent.
The film resists converting the tour into a pseudoevent by preserving the details of the people, the music, and the historical particulars. The images may connote the lemmings returning to their homes, walking through the desert after disaster. In her edit, Zwerin seems to use the lyrics in direct address: “Ooh, see the fire is sweepin’ our very street today. Burns like a red coal carpet. Mad bull lost its way…. Rape, murder! It’s just a shot away.” The lyrics resonate with the feeling of precariousness, the loss of idealism (ignoring the optimistic, “love, sister, it’s just a kiss away”), to sustain this historic read of the film. It feels like an end to the film, a typical dénouement in tragic dramatic structure following the climactic moment of death. But hold off on that one reading …
Conclusion
What makes Gimme Shelter such a strong music film is that it allows the viewer/listener to experience and think about music in a variety of ways. Zwerin’s sensitivity to music contributes to the attention that we can give to the music itself. (The only other rival in Maysles’s work is Horowitz Plays Mozart, also edited by Zwerin.) My first-ever question to Albert Maysles in a formal interview was, “Making the films you did about music, did you learn something about music?”
He responded, “I have no education in music, no training, just as I had no training in filmmaking. But I’ve always had a love for music.”
I first took the statement as one of humility. Later, I realized that I had asked the wrong question. He made films about music that allow us to learn about music, not films that hold a particular frame on music. I think about this when remembering that Maysles says he learned to love music by watching his father listen to it. Maysles passes on that type of musical experience to his audience.
When Gimme Shelter draws to a close, I accept the suspension of complexity. What strikes me the most, however, is not the image or the threads of narrative. I hear the music differently. In the course of the ninety-minute film, music has been so many things: an instrument of entertainment, a symbol of youth culture, a sound that comes from magnetic tape, a formal arrangement of musical devices, an environmental sound in a melee, the center of a spectacle, a cinematic device, an indication of the band’s psychological state and an audience member’s psychological state. The film presents to us music in so many different states, often allowing it to change state as we watch and listen. As a film about music, Gimme Shelter reveals music to be multifarious. The song “Gimme Shelter,” now in direct address, detaches from the image and shows us that there is no such thing as plain music—it is always connected to our ideas of music and how we listen to it. Having been throughout the apparatus of a rock tour, we have leapt through space and time with an eye for what music is and where music is.
When speaking to Maysles about his work, it felt as if we were both discovering new things, that we were on common ground. Even as he sat with me during our final interview, jaundiced from pancreatic cancer, he lit up at discovery, never asserting authorial intent or mastery. He certainly had the right to. His last visit to Washington, DC, had been to accept the National Medal of Arts from President Barack Obama. His cinema—structured by elements of both direct cinema and classical Hollywood cinema—provides a unique and profound view.
I’ll leave Maysles to explain in his own words: “So actually—and I like to say this—if the camera is really good, it’s better than being there. Because most people don’t see it quite as profoundly.”
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