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8 octobre 2009

Pennebaker + Ellington + New York 1953

Donn Alan Pennebaker est un célèbre réalisateur de films sur la musique et les musiciens (plutôt que de "documentaires musicaux"). Il a filmé Dylan, Bowie, DeLorean, Depeche Mode, Hendrix, Jerry Lee Lewis et quelques autres, et restitué le son et l'esprit d'une poignée de festivals de première bourre (Woodstock, Monterey, Toronto, etc.). À vingt-huit ans, il faisait ses débuts en illustrant un morceau de Duke Ellington. 

Daybreak Express, 1953


©
zohilof

« I wanted to make a film about this filthy, noisy train and it’s packed-in passengers that would look beautiful, like the New York City paintings of John Sloan, and I wanted it to go with one of my Duke Ellington records, Daybreak Express.

« I didn’t know much about film editing, or in fact about shooting, so I bought a couple of rolls of Kodachrome at the drugstore, and figured that since the record was about three minutes long, by shooting carefully I could fit the whole thing onto one roll of film. Of course that didn’t work since I couldn’t start and stop my hand-wound camera that easily so I ended up shooting both rolls and even a few more before I was through.  It took about three days to film, and then sat in a closet for several years until I figured out how to edit it and make a print that I could show on a projector. 

« I took it to the Paris theater to see if they would run it. By pure chance it ended up with the Alec Guiness comedy, THE HORSE’S MOUTH which ran there for nearly a year. Since I had a large collection of jazz records, I figured I’d found a way to break into the film business with music films, and it did get me started, but I was never able to make another film like Daybreak. » 

D.A. Pennebaker

John Sloan, « Six o'clock »
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John Sloan, « 6th Avenue »
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