1) Man Of Aran; 2) The South
Sound; 3) Come Wander With Me; 4) Tiger King; 5) The Curach; 6) Vertiginous; 7)
The Sunfish; 8) Coneely Of The West; 9) The North Sound; 10) Woman Of Aran; 11)
It Comes Back Again; 12) No Man Is An Archipelago.
I have to thank this album for its educational
value on my behalf — although I did know about Nanook Of The North and have even seen bits of it, I neither
remembered that it was originally filmed by Robert Flaherty, nor did I know of
him as a major force in the dubious genre of «ethnofiction». Apparently, Man Of Aran is one of his better known
documentaries, this time, about a bunch of «primitive» Irish seamen living in
pre-modern conditions on the Aran Islands. Originally slagged off as being
almost completely staged, yes, but people have relented over time: after all,
moving pictures do not necessarily have to be as true to life as scientific
volumes, and a little staged excitement can be excused.
Anyway, for the 2009 DVD release of the movie,
the people in charge approached none other than British Sea Power with the
request to provide a new soundtrack. Apparently, for an «epic» movie like
that, they needed something appropriate, and who would be the most «epic» band
in the neighborhood? And not just «epic», but with a special taste for
sea-related topics and oceanic effects? There you go.
The album is
a soundtrack, mind you. There is only one vocal number: ʽCome Wander With Meʼ,
a cover of an old tune from Twilight Zone
sung by a guest star rather than Yan — Cedric Bixler-Zavala of the Mars Volta.
Everything else is strictly instrumental: loud, lengthy, echoey, very British
Sea Power-ish, and about as exciting as you would expect from a coherent
soundtrack to an old documentary.
The tracks are not entirely of an ambient
nature. ʽThe Sunfishʼ, in all of its 11-minute «glory», and ʽThe North Soundʼ,
for instance, are propelled forward at speedy tempos and sometimes even with
nicely distorted post-punk riffage, probably reflecting the tendency of the
native population of Aran to follow up a hard day's work by coming home,
plugging in, and going at it like there was no work tomorrow. Unfortunately,
all of them would end up sounding just like British Sea Power did on Do You Like Rock Music?
Other sonic varieties include cutesy
piano-and-chimes waltzing (ʽThe Curachʼ), slow dreamy folk shuffles, often with
solid help from new band member Abi Fry on viola (ʽConeely Of The Westʼ), and,
of course, simply lots and lots of droney atmosphere (title track, etc.). If
you can get in the spirit, the sonic waves might really transport you to a
different place — not necessarily to Aran, though, because the soundtrack is
just too dreamy and epic-romantic to
be an appropriate accompaniment to the rowdy, troublesome life of a
pre-industrial population. Maybe to Aldebaran, or to Arrakis (although the
latter might have some problems with supporting an oceanic environment).
Overall, there is no attempt here to adopt any
sort of different musical personality in order to «match the individual vision
of Roberty Flaherty». The band just does what it wants to do, cutting out the
vocals and limiting the «rock'n'roll drive» for technical reasons, but in
everything else, not advancing seriously anywhere beyond their latest albums
(for comparison, when one of their apparent idols, Neil Young, did his own
soundtrack for Jim Jarmusch's Dead Man,
it managed at once to sound Neil Young-ish — and also sound like nothing he'd
ever done before). Fans will be happy, non-fans like me will probably be
indifferent. But at least, unlike Do You
Like Rock Music?, this release does not even pretend to stocking solid, memorable melodies. And the final decision
whether it works well as a soundtrack will have to be made by someone else — I
have not seen the movie, nor do I plan to in the nearest future.
It's a great movie, but I guess I wouldn't recommend it for anyone but hardcore cinephiles. I don't enjoy the idea of having to listen to mediocre indie-arena rock while trying to watch it though. Seems like a really weird move on the part of the DVD company to me, but I guess they'll try anything to get some of these young whippersnappers interested in anything older than The Godfather films (not that I think it'll work, even a little bit).
ReplyDeleteYou are mistaken for The Godfather movie is very good, it's the book that's not good. Thus I ignore your recommendations.
DeleteI never said that The Godfather (the movie) wasn't good (although I do have my problems with it, but that's neither here nor there), only that most kids that like The Godfather aren't very interested in knowing where it come from (not that it came from Robert J. Flaherty of course, but... ah well).
DeleteRare example The Godfather is of a movie that corrects the book! Of kids liking the Godfather I have never heard most kids like Dead Man and other such nonsense..
DeleteDead Man? You mean the Jarmusch film? Really? I've never even known any kids who knew anything about Jarmusch, or any independent cinema for that matter. Maybe we just come from different scenes (or is this Alex?).
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