I have a series of films titled Film for Music for Film that were all
created/composed to music.  The idea was to give equal weight to both the
music and the film but the music came first.  I can let you know more about
this series (which also includes my film De Profundis plus my 5 multi screen
one-hour work CAGE: A FILMIC CIRCUS ON METAPHORS ON VISION).

You can preview some of the films on the Lightcone website at:
http://lightcone.org/en/filmmaker-41-lawrence-f-brose

You can read brief descriptions of some of the films on Canyon Cinema¹s
website at: http://canyoncinema.com/catalog/filmmaker/?i=54

Plus a brief overall description at:
http://canyoncinema.com/catalog/film/?i=2624

Please contact me off list if you have any questions.

Best,

Lawrence



On 1/9/13 4:32 PM, "Herb Shellenberger" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hello Frameworkers. There have been a few really great
> looking-for-this-type-of-film threads recently, so I thought I would throw my
> query out there.
>  
> A colleague and I were discussing experimental films that were composed to
> music. In general we think of film scores being added after the fact, but
> there are few films that I can think of that are composed specifically to fit
> a piece of music:
>  
>  
> Studies for the Decay of the West (dir. Klaus Wyborny)
> In Wyborny's "musical film," every new sound triggers a new image: 6,299
> shots, all directly edited within his Super-8 camera. An intoxicating,
> stroboscopic trip to industrial, natural and urban landscapes in East Africa,
> New York, the Ruhr region and Rimini. This experimental music film refers to
> Oswald Spengler¹s world-famous 1918 philosophical work The Decay of the West.
> Culture pessimist Spengler argues that progress is an illusion and that the
> modern era brings little good. People are no longer able to understand the
> rationality of the world. Wyborny does not set out to make a film version of
> Spengler's theories, but rather a visual reflection on the modern age; a
> stroboscopic journey in five parts to industrial, natural and urban
> landscapes. He uses 6,299 shots, edited directly in a Super-8 camera. Each
> piano note and violin vibrato evokes a new image: demolished buildings,
> rubble, destruction and nature. This film forms a counterpart to Wyborny¹s
> previous films series Eine andere Welt. Lieder der Erde II(2004/2005). [Film
> Society of Lincoln Center]
>  
>  
> Passage Through: A Ritual (dir. Stan Brakahge)
> When I received the tape of Philip Corner's ³Through the Mysterious Barricade,
> Lumen 1 (after F. Couperin),² he included a note that thanked me for my film,
> ³The Riddle of Lumen,² he'd just seen and which had in some way inspired this
> music. I, in turn, was so moved by the tape he sent I immediately asked his
> permission to "set it to film." It required the most exacting editing process
> ever; and in the course of that work it occurred to me that I'd originally
> made ³The Riddle of Lumen² hoping someone would make an "answering" film and
> entertain my visual riddle in the manner of the riddling poets of yore. I most
> expected Hollis Frampton (because of Zorn's ³Lemma²) to pick up the challenge;
> but he never did. In some sense I think composer Corner has - and now we have
> this dance of riddles as music and film combine to make "passage," in every
> sense of the word, further possible. (To be absolutely "true to" the ritual of
> this passage, the two reels of the film should be shown on one projector,
> taking the normal amount of time, without rewinding reel #1 or showing the
> finish and start leaders of either - especially without changing the sound
> dials - between reels.) [Stan Brakhage, via CFMDC]
>  
>  
> These are both films that use film to ³play² music in a sense, or use music to
> generate images or structures. While some filmmakers may have used music in
> this way in a portion of a larger film, I¹m more interested in films that
> exclusively use this method, whether it is with one complete piece or a few.
> Also, I¹m trying to focus on films that integrate music more deeply than just
> cutting on specific beats.
>  
> Any ideas would be much appreciated!
>  
>  Herb Shellenberger
> Programs Office Manager
>  
> 3701 CHESTNUT STREET | PHILADELPHIA, PA 19104
> phone: 215.895.6575   |  fax: 215.895.6562
> email: [email protected] | web: www.ihousephilly.org
> <http://www.ihousephilly.org/>
>  
> 
> 
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