Modulations
Directed by Lara Lee, whose last film was the flawed overview of virtual
realities Synthetic Pleasures, this look at the history and the
contemporary face of electronic music features interviews with an impressive
international cast of pa and present auteurs -- from Miles Davis's splice-happy
producer Teo Macero and Parisian musique concrète-ist Pierre
Henry to disco doyen Giorgio Moroder; from Detroit and Chicago house pioneers
Kevin Saunderson and Jesse Saunders to drum 'n' bass masters LTJ Bukem and Roni
Size; from Amer-indie post-rocker Bundy Brown to Beastie Boys turntablist Mix
Master Mike. Lee's quick-cut sound-byte editing style, though an apt metaphor
for the music she explores, ranges from distracting to just plain annoying, and
it tends to undermine the film's laudable attempt to trace today's techno in
all its guises (jungle, ambient, hip-hop, etc.) back through Detroit house,
Kraftwerk, and disco to conceptual giants like John Cage and Karlheinz
Stockhausen. Besides, PBS did a better job of that with its 10-part Rock
&Roll:An Unruly History back in '95. At the Avon Friday and
Saturday, December 11 and 12, at midnight.
-- Matt Ashare
|