The Twilight Drone On At the Film Archive
This Week The Pelorus Trust Mediagallery Presents
The Twilight
Drone
A live audio/visual
performance by Johannes Contag
7pm, Thurs 17 April
$8 / $6
New Zealand Film Archive mediatheatre
A film
with live accompaniment by musician/video artist Johannes
Contag. As Contag’s previous Sleepytime musical releases
were a homage to the origins of ambient music, this current
work explores the notion of the ambient film. Presented in
association with the Artist's Film Festival curated by Paula
Booker.
The Twilight Drone is the third instalment
in Johannes Contag’s Sleepytime series. While the previous
releases were music albums, containing hypnotically slow,
minimal and at times meditative pieces of instrumental
music, The Twilight Drone is a musical film. As Contag’s
previous Sleepytime releases were an homage to the origins
of ambient music, the current work explores the notion of
the ambient film.
Over a period of 49 minutes, the
camera follows three silhouetted figures in a snowy paddock,
their actions structured by an unknown choreography. True to
the static nature of ambient film, there is no overall plot
or narrative, and there is no perceivable character
development; instead, the figures’ movements are repeated,
reversed, mirrored, doubled, inverted, sped up, slowed down,
coloured, extracted.
The accompanying soundtrack is
based on a constant, undulating filter drone that is at
times embellished with rhythms and textures but essentially
stays true to its cyclical nature for the duration of the
film. It is this which really sustains the film’s
non-developmental structure, creating a broad arc of
dynamics to engage the viewer until the end.
At the
live presentation of The Twilight Drone, Contag will enhance
the existing soundtrack with a range of improvised
instrumental textures that spontaneously respond to the
visual material and emphasise the work’s static
atmosphere.
Johannes Contag has previously worked with
the music group Cloudboy, with whom he produced two albums
and did several live film/music projects. The most ambitious
of these was Shape Of The Land in collaboration with the
Film Archive (2002/3), a programme of 1920s governmental and
private films accompanied by a live electro-acoustic
soundtrack performed by the band. This was toured
extensively in New Zealand as well as Europe.
Another
film/music highlight with Cloudboy was a live soundtrack to
the film Baraka. Most recently, Contag has released an album
with Jay Clarkson (Over The Mountain) and an L.P. with
improvised drone rock band Bad Statistics, which was
published by Belgian record label Kraak. Contag will tour in
Europe to promote both this album and The Twilight Drone
later in the
year.
ENDS