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 ****Movie Review****
Touch the Sound (Germany)
Directed by Thomas Riedelsheimer
Featuring: Evelyn Glennie & Fred Frith
For those who have ever wondered where a musician draws her inspiration or
wondered about the origins of sound, Touch the Sound provides one woman's
explanation and exploration of the wonderful world of sound. Although many
viewers watching this abstract documentary might consider it cinema, it is more
about the breath and spirit behind music. The vertiginous opening shots draw
viewers into a series of chaotic scenes in which Scottish percussionist Evelyn
Glennie pounds out beats on a snare drum in a train station in New York City.
Eventually, our eyes and our ears are inundated what could only be called noise
and sight pollution, but also moments of pastoral beauty.
Throughout the film, we are exposed to a multitude of sounds from snow falling
on leaves, to the crashing surf on Scotland and the California coast, to the
demolition of skyscrapers, a vibrant grocery store in Tokyo and oh, yes,
avant-garde music. We are also exposed to overwhelming advertisements in the
form of neon lights, billboards and video ads in such cities as New York and
Tokyo. It is after all, the world we live in and the one some of us would like
to escape.
About half way through the film, we learn that Evelyn Glennie is deaf. She
explains that she hears sound through vibration captured in her body. She brings
up the question on how people without hearing disabilities feel or hear sound.
We can see that Evelyn is not only a strong and capable human being, but in
fact, a phenomenal musician who has mastered a variety of percussion
instruments, although the snare drum is her favorite. She globe trots throughout
the duration of the film, to Cologne Germany, where she records an
improvisational project with guitarist Fred Frith, to a rooftop in Manhattan
where she joins another drummer in an all-out jam session, to Fuji City and
Tokyo, Japan where she converses in beats with master traditional drummers. She
visits her childhood farm in Scotland where she discovers and plays with scrap
metal capable of creating unique timbre and rhythm.
Sound has its own universe. It is described on the film's web site as, "Life
is rhythm--at the heart of every life form their is rhythm. Movement, flow,
change, renewal and repe-tition are all based in rhythm. It is only rhythm, that
we can experience time." Percussionists would never take rhythm or the
silence between beats for granted, in fact, no musician would since rhythm is
the root of all music and it is a common language spoken between musicians and
every being on the planet. Evelyn and German filmmaker, Thomas Riedelsheimer
show us that rhythm through film footage that flows and punctuates to the beats
Evelyn plays on various instruments, both conventional and unconventional. Her
musical collaborator, Frith is no stranger to this world of sound and is in
fact, a renowned avant-garde musician. As he collaborates on guitar and prepared
guitars, we see him caught up in Evelyn's enchanted world, tossing rolls of
paper from a loft in a decaying industrial warehouse. And it is as Evelyn
mentioned earlier in the film, we can see sound as streams of paper arc in the
vast industrial space.
Touch the Sound gives a new meaning to "playing" music. Frith mentions that
musicians are like children experimenting with sound. They are enchanted with
all the sounds that they can make on musical instruments and found objects. This
is a liberating documentary that speaks of freeing the breath (Japan) and
allowing one to play with musical instruments the way a child plays with toys.
Musicians after all, enjoy breaking down cultural barriers, journeying into
sound and grabbing their inspiration wherever possible. For artists, inspiration
can come from any source at any time, as is the case with Frith who began
composing a violin concerto while enduring a medical test. Certainly, this
documentary will delight musicians of varying stripes, although it might act as
a sleeping aid to those folks who do not immerse themselves in any artistic
outlet. Only those who truly love music will enjoy this film, and others who
only collect music for materialistic sake, will most likely fall asleep during
the film. This documentary marries a 1960's art happening with the joy of music.
For more information go to
http://www.touchthesound.com
[Buy
Touch the Sound].
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