Playing to the Camera is the first full-length study devoted to the musical performance documentary. Its scope ranges from rock concert films to experimental video art featuring modernist music. Unlike the 'music under' produced for films by unseen musicians, on-screen 'live' performances show us the bodies that produce the sounds we hear. Exploring the link between moving images and musical movement as physical gesture, this volume asks why performance is so often derided as mere skill whereas composition is afforded the status of art, a question that opens onto a broader critique of attitudes regarding mental and physical labor in Western culture.
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction: In Praise of Performance
- 1 Cool Jazz, Hot Jazz and Hard Bop on a Summer’s Day
- 2 Wild Guitarists and Spastic Singers: Virtuosic Performance on Film
- 3 Direct Cinema, Rock’s Public Persona and the Emergence of the Rock Star
- 4 Instrumental Technique and Facial Expression On Screen
- 5 Independent Cinema Meets Free Jazz: Shirley Clarke’s Ornette: Made in America
- 6 ‘I’m Looking at Them and They’re Looking at Me’: Observation and Communication in Sex Pistols: Live at the Longhorn
- Conclusion: Simple Gestures and Smooth Spaces in Robert Cahen’s Boulez-Repons
- Bibliography
- Index