ImagÂine, if you will, an evening’s enterÂtainÂment conÂsistÂing of an episode of PortÂlandia, a spin of NirÂvana’s In Utero, and a screenÂing of KoyÂaanisqatÂsi. PerÂhaps these works would, at first glance, seem to have litÂtle in comÂmon. But if you end the night by watchÂing the above episode of Big Think’s series DisÂpatchÂes from the Well with Kmele FosÂter, their comÂmon spirÂit may well come into view. In it, FosÂter travÂels AmerÂiÂca in order to visÂit with GodÂfrey RegÂgio, Steve AlbiÂni, and Fred Armisen, wideÂly known, respecÂtiveÂly, as the direcÂtor of KoyÂaanisqatÂsi, the proÂducÂer of In Utero, and the co-creÂator of PortÂlandia. All of them have also made a great deal of othÂer work, and none of them are about to stop now.
“When you have a mania, you can scream and go nuts, or you can write everyÂthing down,” says RegÂgio. “I write everyÂthing down.” The same conÂcept arisÂes in FosÂter’s conÂverÂsaÂtion with AlbiÂni, who believes that “the best music is made in serÂvice of the mania of the peoÂple doing it at the moment.” As for “the peoÂple who are tryÂing to be popÂuÂlar, who are tryÂing to, like, enterÂtain — a lot of that music is trivÂial.”
FosÂter credÂiÂbly describes AlbiÂni as “a man with a code,” not least that which dicÂtates his rejecÂtion of digÂiÂtal media. “I’m not makÂing an aesÂthetÂic case for anaÂlog recordÂing,” he says. “AnaÂlog recordÂings are a durable archive of our culÂture, and in the disÂtant future, I want peoÂple to be able to hear what our music soundÂed like.”
To creÂate as perÂsisÂtentÂly as these three have demands a willÂingÂness to play the long game — and to “re-perÂceive the norÂmal,” as RegÂgio puts it while articÂuÂlatÂing the purÂpose of his unconÂvenÂtionÂal docÂuÂmenÂtary films. To his mind, it’s what we perÂceive least that affects us most, and if “what we do every day, withÂout quesÂtion, is who we are,” we can enrich our expeÂriÂence of realÂiÂty by askÂing quesÂtions in our life and our work like, “Is it the conÂtent of your mind that deterÂmines your behavÂior, or is it your behavÂior that deterÂmines the conÂtent of your mind?” This line of inquiry will send each of us in difÂferÂent intelÂlecÂtuÂal and aesÂthetÂic direcÂtions, imposÂsiÂble though it is to arrive at a final answer. And in the face of the fact that we all end up at the same place in the end, Armisen has a creÂative stratÂeÂgy: “I realÂly celÂeÂbrate death,” he explains. “I have my funerÂal all planned out and everyÂthing.”
RelatÂed conÂtent:
Read Steve Albini’s UncomÂproÂmisÂing ProÂposÂal to ProÂduce Nirvana’s In Utero (1993)
Fred Armisen TeachÂes a Short SemÂiÂnar on the HisÂtoÂry of Punk
KoyÂaanisqatÂsi at 1552% Speed
Why Man CreÂates: Saul Bass’ Oscar-WinÂning AniÂmatÂed Look at CreÂativÂiÂty (1968)
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities, the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles and the video series The City in CinÂeÂma. FolÂlow him on TwitÂter at @colinmarshall or on FaceÂbook.
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