Kabuki actor Tamasaburo Bando interprets Bach.
Yo-Yo Ma: Inspired by Bach - Falling Down Stairs
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
Falling Down Stairs follows an intense year-long collaboration between Yo-Yo Ma and choreographer Mark Morris, which culminates in a spectacular performance, conceived especially for film, of J. S. Bach's 'Suite No. 3 for Unaccompanied Cello' as interpreted by Yo-Yo Ma and the 14-member Mark Morris Dance Group.
The film shows the intimacy, soul-searching and humor involved in the creative process, as Yo-Yo and Mark struggle to create a completely new work that can live up to the title 'Inspired by Bach.'
'The pairing with choreographer Morris...is particularly inspired...Anyone...can see how enthusiastically the cellist responds to Morris' fanciful choreography and hear how some of that unfeigned delight has made its way into Ma's rhythmically light-footed performance.' Time Magazine
'Visually exquisite.' Toronto Star
'Truly exciting.' Library Journal
Citation
Main credits
Ma, Yo-Yo (host)
Ma, Yo-Yo (instrumentalist)
Fichman, Niv (film producer)
Sweete, Barbara Willis (film director)
Morris, Mark (choreographer)
Other credits
Director of photography, Milan Podsedly; editor, David New.
Distributor subjects
Choreography; Creative Process; Dance; Humanities; Music; Performing ArtsKeywords
WEBVTT
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[music]
00:01:08.202 --> 00:01:13.123
-It’s always dangerous to
subject a piece of music,
00:01:13.290 --> 00:01:15.913
especially something that’s
a great piece of the musical
00:01:16.080 --> 00:01:20.190
literature to the opinion
of a choreographer,
00:01:20.460 --> 00:01:21.913
which is a completely
different thing from
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the opinion of a musician
or of a vocalist.
00:01:25.740 --> 00:01:27.872
-Wait a minute, wait minute.
Hold that right there.
00:01:28.039 --> 00:01:28.190
-What?
00:01:28.357 --> 00:01:29.574
-Why do you say that?
00:01:29.741 --> 00:01:33.333
-Because it’s easy to feel like I’m
committing a crime against music.
00:01:33.500 --> 00:01:33.940
-Mark--
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-It’s the simple thing of,
\"Here’s a fabulous piece of music,
00:01:37.609 --> 00:01:39.034
isn’t that enough?\"
00:01:40.356 --> 00:01:47.356
[music]
00:01:53.862 --> 00:01:58.800
-We could be belittled and say,
\"Okay, look, this music is so great,
00:01:59.100 --> 00:02:01.423
I shouldn’t even play
it because I can’t
00:02:01.590 --> 00:02:05.413
possibly make this as
great as this music is,
00:02:05.580 --> 00:02:07.363
so I might as well not do it.\"
00:02:07.530 --> 00:02:10.213
We could say the same thing about
you and say, \"Well, you know,
00:02:10.380 --> 00:02:15.030
this music is complete in itself,
why do you want to tamper with it?\"
00:02:22.590 --> 00:02:26.670
I think that what this music
is attempting to describe
00:02:27.030 --> 00:02:30.810
is something that can take
all of the imagination
00:02:31.020 --> 00:02:34.123
of lots of people put
together and still,
00:02:34.290 --> 00:02:37.830
it’s trying to describe something
that we can’t quite grasp.
00:02:47.945 --> 00:02:49.150
-Can we start?
00:02:53.021 --> 00:02:55.754
[snaps fingers]
00:02:58.271 --> 00:03:05.271
[music]
00:03:58.647 --> 00:03:59.573
-This is great.
00:03:59.740 --> 00:04:00.285
-Voilà.
00:04:00.452 --> 00:04:00.908
-Voilà.
00:04:01.075 --> 00:04:01.879
-Isn’t it great?
00:04:02.046 --> 00:04:04.421
-I love bards,
but this is a great one.
00:04:05.370 --> 00:04:08.430
This place has a special
feel for you anyway, right?
00:04:10.111 --> 00:04:14.023
-The whole place, every building
was built only for dancing.
00:04:14.190 --> 00:04:16.033
It was the first place
built only for dancing
00:04:16.200 --> 00:04:18.638
in the States and it
still is like that.
00:04:18.900 --> 00:04:21.343
It can convert to a theater
if it needs to or just
00:04:21.510 --> 00:04:24.480
a fabulous way out in the
woods rehearsal place.
00:04:26.220 --> 00:04:27.661
Why don’t you play some lowness?
00:04:27.828 --> 00:04:28.304
-All right.
00:04:28.471 --> 00:04:30.929
-I’ll go farther away to
hear what it sounds like.
00:04:31.096 --> 00:04:34.570
[music]
00:04:34.894 --> 00:04:37.085
[claps]
00:04:39.431 --> 00:04:40.354
-You like this note?
00:04:40.521 --> 00:04:45.869
-Yes. Bone conduction [?].
00:04:46.196 --> 00:04:46.970
-That sounds fabulous.
00:04:47.137 --> 00:04:47.876
-Of course it will.
00:04:48.043 --> 00:04:50.588
-It was resonating.
Mark, it sounds fabulous.
00:04:50.755 --> 00:04:51.461
-Fabulous.
00:04:51.628 --> 00:04:54.092
-Fabulous. Quinn, what do you think?
00:04:55.508 --> 00:05:02.508
[background noise]
00:05:18.831 --> 00:05:23.490
-Okay.
June, let’s see, you’re going to do
00:05:25.710 --> 00:05:31.183
side, back,
across, across, side, back, across,
00:05:31.403 --> 00:05:36.840
across,
side, then step into a tiny jeté.
00:05:40.740 --> 00:05:42.165
This has to travel.
00:05:45.360 --> 00:05:48.907
One, two, three, four, over my head,
00:05:49.074 --> 00:05:52.560
five, six, seven, eight, and one.
00:05:53.340 --> 00:05:56.250
Do that part, not here, [?].
00:05:58.770 --> 00:06:02.320
Turn, turn, don’t jump.
Just do this.
00:06:06.030 --> 00:06:10.525
Seven, two, three, eight, and turn,
turn, try pushing them forward,
00:06:10.907 --> 00:06:15.701
turn, turn, and--
00:06:18.600 --> 00:06:20.607
-What comes first for you?
00:06:21.595 --> 00:06:23.668
An idea? A movement?
00:06:25.199 --> 00:06:26.474
A piece of music?
00:06:27.381 --> 00:06:28.463
-Just that. [crosstalk]
00:06:28.630 --> 00:06:31.216
No. Music, always. Always, always.
00:06:31.383 --> 00:06:32.831
-What in music?
00:06:32.998 --> 00:06:34.987
Does music trigger something?
00:06:35.681 --> 00:06:37.688
-It’s something that I think
00:06:37.855 --> 00:06:42.013
it’s mostly a tone thing,
an ambient thing,
00:06:42.180 --> 00:06:44.252
a feeling that actually--
a deep feeling thing.
00:06:44.419 --> 00:06:45.072
-It’s a feeling.
00:06:45.239 --> 00:06:47.713
-It’s a feeling thing
that’s triggered musically.
00:06:47.880 --> 00:06:53.160
-What feelings are triggered
by the Third Suite?
00:06:55.230 --> 00:06:56.803
-This is kind of horrible,
00:06:56.970 --> 00:06:59.940
but I had something that
was almost like a dream.
00:07:00.120 --> 00:07:03.013
I’m telling the truth here,
where I couldn’t get to sleep,
00:07:03.180 --> 00:07:05.263
I don’t know if it was food
or jet lag or something,
00:07:05.430 --> 00:07:06.403
and I was starting to think about
00:07:06.570 --> 00:07:09.480
this piece and I saw
a horrible accident,
00:07:09.720 --> 00:07:13.393
which was one of my dancers had
a horrible fall down the stairs.
00:07:13.560 --> 00:07:18.344
It was like exactly, \"No, no, no.\"
Then a little trickle of blood.
00:07:18.673 --> 00:07:19.073
-Wow.
00:07:19.240 --> 00:07:20.923
-Isn’t that horrible?
I don’t know, that might be my dance.
00:07:21.090 --> 00:07:25.410
That’s why I don’t like to talk about
it because it might actually exist.
00:07:26.182 --> 00:07:28.827
-Oh, my god, I’m falling down steps.
Oh, my god.
00:07:28.994 --> 00:07:29.862
-That’s the whole idea.
00:07:30.029 --> 00:07:30.753
-I know.
00:07:30.920 --> 00:07:33.795
-If anyone can handle it,
I know you can, Ruth.
00:07:34.230 --> 00:07:36.433
-I had a dress like this and I
thought I was going to kill myself.
00:07:36.600 --> 00:07:38.293
-Is it because it’s
a little too long
00:07:38.460 --> 00:07:39.193
or is it because it’s way too long?
00:07:39.360 --> 00:07:40.603
-I don’t-- it was just ankle length.
00:07:40.770 --> 00:07:42.763
I also have a phobia
of steps since I had
00:07:42.930 --> 00:07:44.799
an accident when I was little
falling down steps. See?
00:07:44.966 --> 00:07:46.327
I’m just barely tripping.
00:07:46.494 --> 00:07:48.133
-You know what else I can
tell you-- I’m wondering,
00:07:48.300 --> 00:07:52.382
look because what I’m thinking is--
that looks beautiful, actually.
00:07:52.710 --> 00:07:53.976
-I can grab it.
00:07:54.143 --> 00:07:55.253
-I’m thinking there
will be two long ones
00:07:55.420 --> 00:07:58.063
like this and the rest
will be these dresses,
00:07:58.230 --> 00:08:01.290
and then there’s three of
them in blouses like this.
00:08:03.420 --> 00:08:08.443
Guillermo, do a little bit of
the beginning part of Sarabande.
00:08:08.610 --> 00:08:09.610
Go.
00:08:10.426 --> 00:08:12.832
[vocalizes]
00:08:13.374 --> 00:08:15.054
-Just for twisting this.
00:08:15.989 --> 00:08:21.460
Too long, too long, a little
too long. Here’s what we’ll do--
00:08:22.162 --> 00:08:23.505
-You get used to kicking it,
but I don’t
00:08:23.672 --> 00:08:24.909
want it to be about
only kicking the dress.
00:08:25.076 --> 00:08:27.138
-Exactly, I know, I know, I know.
00:08:27.446 --> 00:08:34.446
[music]
00:09:01.410 --> 00:09:03.433
-All right, ready? This is marking.
00:09:03.600 --> 00:09:05.593
I’ll give you two.
Here we go. Shut up. Dum-bum-bum.
00:09:05.760 --> 00:09:07.203
[snaps fingers]
00:09:07.370 --> 00:09:13.714
[music]
00:09:15.480 --> 00:09:18.043
Right here.
Okay, one more time, you guys.
00:09:18.274 --> 00:09:19.510
That’s right.
00:09:20.340 --> 00:09:25.300
A one, two, three,
two, and-- [snaps fingers] Good.
00:09:29.330 --> 00:09:30.712
[vocalizes]
00:09:30.879 --> 00:09:35.173
That’s good. The next thing is,
now five people for this.
00:09:35.340 --> 00:09:36.992
Wait, three, five, six.
00:09:37.159 --> 00:09:41.680
Ugh. Never mind. Fuck that.
00:09:53.280 --> 00:09:55.155
That would be next from there.
00:10:05.280 --> 00:10:06.280
Shit.
00:10:15.690 --> 00:10:16.690
Oh,
00:10:19.440 --> 00:10:20.640
how unfortunate.
00:10:22.980 --> 00:10:24.013
Go from the very beginning.
00:10:24.180 --> 00:10:26.993
You know what,
I know, I can actually do this.
00:10:29.820 --> 00:10:30.820
Shit.
00:10:35.820 --> 00:10:42.583
One of the things that I
see in this music is that
00:10:42.750 --> 00:10:45.611
you see a scale and
arpeggio in the beginning.
00:10:45.778 --> 00:10:48.373
[music]
00:10:48.540 --> 00:10:53.085
Then arpeggio.
In the middle, you have only-
00:10:53.252 --> 00:10:55.887
[music]
00:10:56.054 --> 00:10:58.997
-arpeggios. In the beginning-
00:10:59.285 --> 00:11:02.743
[music]
00:11:02.910 --> 00:11:07.620
-lots of scales, and then with-- I
actually see it as almost a puzzle
00:11:07.920 --> 00:11:13.950
of almost of a fight between
the scales and the arpeggios,
00:11:14.880 --> 00:11:18.103
both wanting to be all of it,
00:11:18.593 --> 00:11:22.637
and it gets somehow resolved
00:11:22.804 --> 00:11:25.003
in the end and you see
the beginning puzzle,
00:11:25.170 --> 00:11:27.170
the beginning kernel at the end.
00:11:27.690 --> 00:11:29.953
Does that make any visual sense?
00:11:30.120 --> 00:11:32.773
is that something that you
think is something that’s,
00:11:32.940 --> 00:11:36.060
\"The guy’s really nuts.
What’s you’re talking about?\"
00:11:36.799 --> 00:11:37.874
-I thought you meant
the guy is nuts,
00:11:38.041 --> 00:11:39.519
Bach,
you were talking about [crosstalk].
00:11:39.686 --> 00:11:43.507
-No, the reason I’m saying
this is because maybe
00:11:43.957 --> 00:11:47.457
Mr. Bach working here
might totally disagree.
00:11:47.783 --> 00:11:51.168
He said, \"Ah, yes, but this is
not what I was thinking about.\"
00:11:51.335 --> 00:11:52.042
[chuckles]
00:11:52.209 --> 00:11:53.893
-You missed totally, you’re way off.
00:11:54.060 --> 00:11:57.798
-Let’s say that’s one possible idea,
do you think well--
00:11:57.965 --> 00:12:00.043
-Well,
that’s part of my homework that I do,
00:12:00.210 --> 00:12:04.680
which is to figure out things like
that and then decide if I want them
00:12:04.860 --> 00:12:07.873
but the actual
representation of black
00:12:08.040 --> 00:12:11.580
dots on white paper done as dancing,
doesn’t work.
00:12:12.420 --> 00:12:15.553
It’s just like deciding which
rules one has to fall on.
00:12:15.720 --> 00:12:19.290
Of course, I feel compelled
to follow the rules of Bach,
00:12:19.590 --> 00:12:24.150
in making a piece to Bach,
whereas you don’t have to,
00:12:24.660 --> 00:12:26.623
you can also have a legitimate dance
00:12:26.790 --> 00:12:29.040
where Bach has
nothing to do with it,
00:12:29.250 --> 00:12:32.370
even though it’s taking
place in front of this music.
00:12:32.933 --> 00:12:36.643
-What are the chances,
do you think, if I hang around,
00:12:36.810 --> 00:12:40.650
that I could learn what
the choreography is,
00:12:40.980 --> 00:12:43.061
so that I could actually be
00:12:43.228 --> 00:12:48.210
influenced by the action on stage?
00:12:48.450 --> 00:12:51.630
-Well, that’s the point.
I think it’s a good idea.
00:12:54.180 --> 00:13:00.970
Let’s do the [?] one,
with everybody.
00:13:03.960 --> 00:13:04.960
Here we go.
00:13:07.140 --> 00:13:07.813
-Should I just start?
00:13:07.980 --> 00:13:09.255
-Yes, just start.
00:13:09.720 --> 00:13:16.720
[music]
00:14:03.266 --> 00:14:04.459
-The end.
00:14:04.626 --> 00:14:05.319
-Good.
00:14:05.486 --> 00:14:06.426
-[laughs]
00:14:06.593 --> 00:14:07.472
-Isn’t that cool?
00:14:07.639 --> 00:14:08.942
-That’s really great.
00:14:09.109 --> 00:14:13.046
-You know this and make this--
00:14:13.811 --> 00:14:15.808
-You got [vocalizes]. Is that right?
00:14:15.975 --> 00:14:19.217
Take this up higher. You look at
it a little bit from this, like
00:14:19.384 --> 00:14:21.082
[vocalizes].
00:14:21.249 --> 00:14:22.963
This is more up this way.
00:14:23.733 --> 00:14:26.790
-Bodies have to follow the
natural laws of gravity
00:14:27.090 --> 00:14:29.683
and so if somebody launches
themselves up in the air,
00:14:29.850 --> 00:14:33.780
you know the timing and the feel
it takes before they land again.
00:14:34.290 --> 00:14:40.287
That gives me a sense of
timing of what I have to do.
00:14:40.725 --> 00:14:42.726
-Let’s see, what should we do?
00:14:44.691 --> 00:14:45.700
I don’t know.
00:14:45.960 --> 00:14:48.223
-This is great,
I don’t need the music anymore.
00:14:48.390 --> 00:14:52.500
I just need to watch you guys
and it’s absolutely clear.
00:14:54.000 --> 00:14:54.493
It’s wonderful.
00:14:54.660 --> 00:14:55.860
-[crosstalk] break
your little heart.
00:14:56.027 --> 00:14:57.943
-It’s really great. [laughs]
00:14:58.110 --> 00:14:59.580
-Let’s do-- I know,
00:15:02.400 --> 00:15:04.543
we have something that we have
to do a little bit up here.
00:15:04.710 --> 00:15:05.473
-The Almand.
00:15:05.640 --> 00:15:06.463
-The Almand.
00:15:06.630 --> 00:15:07.483
-Almand.
00:15:07.650 --> 00:15:08.650
-Almand.
00:15:09.060 --> 00:15:10.560
-The rough movement.
00:15:11.463 --> 00:15:13.042
-Yes, right.
00:15:14.602 --> 00:15:16.783
-I’m trying to keep it versatile,
which is a hard thing to do because
00:15:16.950 --> 00:15:19.513
I usually close systems
off as I go along.
00:15:20.370 --> 00:15:23.203
The fact that this can change,
00:15:23.370 --> 00:15:27.643
like doing different run
throughs of what I’ve
00:15:27.810 --> 00:15:29.713
choreographed so far
with Yo-Yo in the room,
00:15:29.880 --> 00:15:31.963
and I can break it
down and adjust things,
00:15:32.130 --> 00:15:36.374
and he’s mercifully not a giant diva
00:15:36.541 --> 00:15:41.177
egomaniac irritant, he’s a doll,
00:15:41.344 --> 00:15:42.494
Frankly.
00:15:42.661 --> 00:15:44.540
-We’ll probably do
this a couple of times,
00:15:44.707 --> 00:15:47.220
just more accurate than violent.
00:15:47.700 --> 00:15:48.700
Here we go.
00:15:49.016 --> 00:15:55.453
[music]
00:15:55.620 --> 00:15:57.384
-[?] over.
00:15:57.551 --> 00:16:04.551
[music]
00:16:31.198 --> 00:16:34.453
-Really make this the forward
and back thing more-- It
00:16:34.620 --> 00:16:36.673
doesn’t even have to travel
as much as it has to lean,
00:16:36.840 --> 00:16:42.833
so it’s really 3D. All right?
It’s more Dr. Tounge. [laughter]
00:16:46.879 --> 00:16:49.104
-Like the 3D House Of Stewardesses.
00:16:51.074 --> 00:16:52.221
-[?]?
00:16:52.388 --> 00:16:54.638
-You don’t know that?
It’s a classic.
00:16:55.347 --> 00:16:57.315
-I’ll try and rent it.
00:16:58.297 --> 00:17:00.920
[laughter]
00:17:01.358 --> 00:17:02.953
-You’re here probably,
00:17:03.120 --> 00:17:08.186
on a plinth of some-- maybe
this high off the ground.
00:17:08.353 --> 00:17:10.677
My perspective isn’t my specialty.
00:17:11.119 --> 00:17:13.808
That’s you. All right? Yo-Yo.
00:17:14.573 --> 00:17:19.933
Opposite is the staircase,
like a Busby Berkeley staircase,
00:17:20.100 --> 00:17:21.600
something like this.
00:17:21.776 --> 00:17:22.979
-I like that.
00:17:23.420 --> 00:17:27.013
-Five or six steps, depending on how
long it takes to run up and down.
00:17:27.180 --> 00:17:32.298
Then I think over here is a ramp,
00:17:32.846 --> 00:17:34.663
an inclined plane,
00:17:34.830 --> 00:17:37.470
over here is an elliptical platform
00:17:37.680 --> 00:17:39.853
that’s just a few
inches off the ground.
00:17:40.020 --> 00:17:42.793
-I love the idea of the
very different shapes
00:17:42.960 --> 00:17:46.110
also because that goes
so well with the music.
00:17:46.800 --> 00:17:49.050
-It does to me too, I can’t say why.
00:17:49.890 --> 00:17:53.850
It just promotes the
idea of infinite variety.
00:17:54.506 --> 00:17:55.513
-Well, this, for example,
00:17:55.680 --> 00:17:58.680
was the first thing I
thought of as an [vocalizes].
00:17:59.809 --> 00:18:06.809
[music]
00:18:25.610 --> 00:18:29.477
-Now, show me what the
prelude might look like.
00:18:29.804 --> 00:18:30.485
-I can’t possibly.
00:18:30.652 --> 00:18:31.296
-You can’t? Okay.
00:18:31.463 --> 00:18:31.881
-No, because that--
00:18:32.048 --> 00:18:33.258
-[crosstalk] going to take place.
00:18:33.425 --> 00:18:37.380
-Probably everywhere
because what happens is,
00:18:37.740 --> 00:18:42.990
I divided this into 15
parts for 15 dancers
00:18:43.290 --> 00:18:48.060
and it turned out to be before
the final coda actually,
00:18:49.950 --> 00:18:52.980
that it works out to five bars each,
00:18:53.340 --> 00:18:57.120
and so I was in complete disregard
to the phrasing of the music,
00:18:57.330 --> 00:19:01.511
I’ve given each person five bars
and it’s in alphabetical order.
00:19:01.908 --> 00:19:04.096
When they’re not--
00:19:04.263 --> 00:19:05.833
-This is Bach, Cage, Morris.
00:19:06.000 --> 00:19:07.363
-Yes, basically.
00:19:08.238 --> 00:19:15.238
[music]
00:19:27.871 --> 00:19:29.178
Did you break the string?
00:19:29.345 --> 00:19:29.779
-Sorry.
00:19:29.946 --> 00:19:31.499
-We broke a string.
Oh, he broke a string.
00:19:31.666 --> 00:19:33.634
[chuckles]
00:19:33.964 --> 00:19:35.746
Yes, you broke a string.
00:19:36.731 --> 00:19:38.981
-One of the questions
that I had was,
00:19:39.750 --> 00:19:41.863
how was he going to take
a piece of music that’s
00:19:42.030 --> 00:19:45.570
already well made and
how can he add to it?
00:19:45.810 --> 00:19:47.743
I think the way that
he’s found is that
00:19:47.910 --> 00:19:50.293
he’s added a complete another layer
00:19:50.460 --> 00:19:53.203
on top of it that’s
completely his own
00:19:53.370 --> 00:19:59.623
and that’s related to the dancers,
having solos by alphabetical order,
00:19:59.790 --> 00:20:02.473
which only the Mark
Morris dance group knows,
00:20:02.640 --> 00:20:05.078
but having them do
five-measure phrases,
00:20:07.530 --> 00:20:09.223
because that’s what they were doing,
00:20:09.390 --> 00:20:13.317
it adds to the irregular and
the surprise element of what’s
00:20:13.484 --> 00:20:16.765
already in the music,
without just copying the music.
00:20:17.094 --> 00:20:18.773
-[vocalizes]
00:20:18.940 --> 00:20:22.326
[music]
00:20:22.765 --> 00:20:25.111
Okay? Let’s try that again.
00:20:26.097 --> 00:20:29.376
Two-- [?] Two, three.
00:20:30.038 --> 00:20:37.038
[music]
00:20:42.492 --> 00:20:43.808
-Okay? Can you hear that?
00:20:43.975 --> 00:20:44.354
-Yes.
00:20:44.521 --> 00:20:46.545
-So it goes, [vocalizes]
00:20:48.705 --> 00:20:55.705
[music]
00:21:13.576 --> 00:21:15.594
[finger snapping]
00:21:15.923 --> 00:21:19.226
-[vocalizes].
00:21:19.987 --> 00:21:21.727
Pretend you’re playing it, Rachel.
00:21:21.894 --> 00:21:24.055
[music]
00:21:24.222 --> 00:21:28.153
Wiggle, wiggle, stop.
Right. Okay, good. Yes.
00:21:28.320 --> 00:21:32.443
You know, it’s cool that there’s like
a little tiny breath before that,
00:21:32.610 --> 00:21:34.772
which you do, basically.
Where are we?
00:21:34.939 --> 00:21:36.133
Into here.
00:21:36.300 --> 00:21:39.929
[vocalizes].
[music] If I could just--
00:21:40.472 --> 00:21:45.244
Is that all right? Is that a crime
against art to do that? [laughter]
00:21:45.526 --> 00:21:48.285
I mean, for me to request that,
of course. Okay--
00:21:48.452 --> 00:21:51.110
-Mark, I am your slave.
I’ll do anything you want.
00:21:51.277 --> 00:21:53.062
-Anything? [background conversation]
00:21:53.229 --> 00:21:58.633
-Mark, I won’t do anything-- Okay,
sorry, but there are limits.
00:21:58.800 --> 00:22:00.793
-Let’s try it at the real tempo,
one, and two, and three,
00:22:00.960 --> 00:22:03.270
and-- [vocalizes]-- all right.
[laughter]
00:22:03.437 --> 00:22:05.064
-That’s not the thing to say, right?
00:22:05.231 --> 00:22:09.258
-It could be. [laughter]
00:22:09.913 --> 00:22:11.773
-From 35 again.
00:22:13.182 --> 00:22:17.257
-Mark,
the hope that I had was that we would
00:22:17.424 --> 00:22:19.993
take the essence of what is in that
00:22:20.160 --> 00:22:22.783
music and we’d make
something wonderful
00:22:22.950 --> 00:22:23.879
that refers back to the music [?].
00:22:24.046 --> 00:22:27.226
-Well, I think music is more
interesting than dancing,
00:22:27.745 --> 00:22:31.950
so that’s why I choose to
work through music this way.
00:22:32.280 --> 00:22:37.513
-I think you’ve really taken the
essence and made it the same thing,
00:22:37.680 --> 00:22:40.350
except in a slightly
different medium.
00:22:40.680 --> 00:22:44.190
-Well, I’ve figured that dancing
00:22:44.357 --> 00:22:47.730
should allow people
to hear the music,
00:22:48.060 --> 00:22:49.704
instead of, you know, not.
You know what I mean?
00:22:49.871 --> 00:22:50.247
-Uh-huh.
00:22:50.414 --> 00:22:54.013
-I don’t want to screw it up.
00:22:54.180 --> 00:22:57.133
I don’t want to obfuscate
the music through dancing,
00:22:57.300 --> 00:23:00.073
so I choose to do the opposite,
which is why I have to know what I’m
00:23:00.240 --> 00:23:01.933
talking about when
it comes to music,
00:23:02.100 --> 00:23:06.580
so I don’t have some diva
soloist bullying me about.
00:23:07.428 --> 00:23:08.494
-What a horrible thought.
[crosstalk]
00:23:08.661 --> 00:23:11.672
-I meant conductor, of course.
That’s right. [chuckles]
00:23:11.839 --> 00:23:18.839
[music]
00:23:19.673 --> 00:23:21.168
-See this is-no this is fab--
00:23:21.335 --> 00:23:21.835
-Oh, sorry.
00:23:22.002 --> 00:23:24.392
-This is fabulously [?]
if that’s-- That can--
00:23:24.559 --> 00:23:27.363
[music] [vocalizes]
00:23:27.530 --> 00:23:31.005
Yes. It’s this that it’s hard for me
to tell what’s happening, that’s all.
00:23:31.172 --> 00:23:35.576
[music]
00:23:35.904 --> 00:23:41.391
-Yes, right. It’s from the D into the
C that it’s harder to read something.
00:23:41.558 --> 00:23:43.141
[music]
00:23:43.308 --> 00:23:47.728
That down beat right there. Yes.
00:23:48.609 --> 00:23:49.734
[snaps fingers]
00:23:50.064 --> 00:23:57.057
[music]
00:24:23.142 --> 00:24:29.023
-You see, it’s really unusual to
have people where you are recording,
00:24:29.190 --> 00:24:31.393
unless you’re doing a live
recording and what’s really
00:24:31.560 --> 00:24:35.302
great is that you guys are my music
00:24:36.063 --> 00:24:39.330
and you’re my ears, in a way,
00:24:39.510 --> 00:24:40.813
and you’re making me
do things that I’m
00:24:40.980 --> 00:24:44.077
supposedly-- There’s a lot of-
as you said, it’s a-[crosstalk]
00:24:44.244 --> 00:24:44.749
-A circle.
00:24:44.916 --> 00:24:46.595
-Interactive, right?
00:24:46.762 --> 00:24:48.489
-A cycle, yes.
00:24:49.144 --> 00:24:50.310
-I love cycles.
00:24:51.630 --> 00:24:53.150
-All right.
Everything has gone away now.
00:24:53.317 --> 00:24:53.842
-True.
00:24:54.009 --> 00:24:56.443
-There’s only one thing-well, there
are two things left, instead of four.
00:24:56.610 --> 00:24:57.610
We have you.
00:24:57.780 --> 00:24:58.676
-I’m still here.
00:24:58.843 --> 00:24:59.976
-Right? This is you.
00:25:00.143 --> 00:25:00.771
-Yes.
00:25:00.938 --> 00:25:03.823
-Then, the only thing left
is the stairway at this end
00:25:03.990 --> 00:25:06.932
that has now been modified
sort of on the diagonal, so--
00:25:07.099 --> 00:25:12.441
[hums] Floor.
00:25:12.608 --> 00:25:13.698
-Right.
00:25:14.027 --> 00:25:16.663
-So, C-D-D-D-D-C, and that’s it.
00:25:16.830 --> 00:25:20.353
The whole thing goes out this way,
and these just don’t exist anymore,
00:25:20.520 --> 00:25:23.443
and underneath, let’s see,
because this is actually planks,
00:25:23.610 --> 00:25:27.510
it’s not a solid thing. It’s wooden
planks, which I can’t do here.
00:25:28.080 --> 00:25:30.943
We see the supports underneath,
and so this can be lit,
00:25:31.110 --> 00:25:32.802
and a lot of [?] is going
down this way. [crosstalk]
00:25:32.969 --> 00:25:34.481
-It’s going to be lit
outside or inside?
00:25:34.648 --> 00:25:37.523
-Both. Light comes through
and stuff like that.
00:25:38.363 --> 00:25:40.254
-Remember the nightmare you had-
00:25:40.421 --> 00:25:40.866
-Yes, that’s there.
00:25:41.033 --> 00:25:41.330
--at the very beginning?
00:25:41.497 --> 00:25:41.940
-It’s there.
00:25:42.107 --> 00:25:43.159
-It’s there?
Falling down the stairs. [crosstalk]
00:25:43.326 --> 00:25:45.128
-Everybody falls down the stairs.
00:25:45.295 --> 00:25:48.146
[chuckles]
00:25:48.581 --> 00:25:55.581
[background noise]
00:27:01.562 --> 00:27:08.562
[music]
00:27:20.790 --> 00:27:22.108
-I’m suppose to be in this, right?
00:27:22.275 --> 00:27:22.693
-Right.
00:27:22.860 --> 00:27:26.623
-Why? I mean,
I could just be playing at some place
00:27:26.790 --> 00:27:27.943
else or not within-- [crosstalk]
00:27:28.110 --> 00:27:29.724
-It’d be easier, probably.
00:27:29.891 --> 00:27:30.229
-Yes.
00:27:30.396 --> 00:27:30.731
-But--
00:27:30.898 --> 00:27:32.294
-So, why am I on this plinth?
00:27:32.461 --> 00:27:35.336
-Well, because I want it
to be a closed system.
00:27:35.556 --> 00:27:36.081
-A closed system.
00:27:36.248 --> 00:27:38.623
-I mean, first of all,
you have to be playing there.
00:27:38.790 --> 00:27:41.113
You have to be playing
in the room because
00:27:41.280 --> 00:27:42.507
that’s how the dance
is supposed to happen.
00:27:42.674 --> 00:27:45.703
-Right,
but am I in some way integrated?
00:27:45.870 --> 00:27:48.540
-So that it’s stairs,
and you, and us.
00:27:48.817 --> 00:27:51.283
-So I’m like the stairs.
I’m the opposite of the stairs.
00:27:51.450 --> 00:27:52.935
-Yes, you have the same
gravity as the stairs.
00:27:53.102 --> 00:27:56.069
-Right. Except the light
doesn’t come from inside.
00:27:56.236 --> 00:27:59.680
-Well, maybe in the future if you
practice everyday, that will happen.
00:27:59.847 --> 00:28:02.518
-[laughs] I open my mouth,
[crosstalk]
00:28:02.685 --> 00:28:03.661
-You won’t even have
to touch-[crosstalk]
00:28:03.828 --> 00:28:05.244
--suddenly you see that glowing.
[laughs]
00:28:05.411 --> 00:28:07.664
--touch bow to string.
00:28:08.216 --> 00:28:12.177
-All your programs are dedicated
00:28:12.722 --> 00:28:15.955
or with thanks to Maxine and god,
right?
00:28:16.122 --> 00:28:20.760
-Yes. Well, because Maxine is my
mother and that’s self-explanatory
00:28:22.020 --> 00:28:26.679
and the god thing is a giant sense
00:28:27.112 --> 00:28:31.890
of rightness, of absoluteness.
00:28:32.730 --> 00:28:34.333
I don’t mean the beard and stuff.
00:28:34.500 --> 00:28:35.623
I don’t mean stained glass windows.
00:28:35.790 --> 00:28:37.513
-Do you mean a certain
kind of sacredness?
00:28:37.680 --> 00:28:41.013
-Yes.
I certain sort of seriousness and,
00:28:42.112 --> 00:28:44.002
I don’t know,
completion-[crosstalk]
00:28:44.169 --> 00:28:46.162
-Do you feel that with all
the pieces-[crosstalk]
00:28:46.329 --> 00:28:46.783
-Spiritual completion.
00:28:46.950 --> 00:28:48.100
--spiritual completion,
00:28:48.267 --> 00:28:52.392
that every piece that you do
strives towards that goal?
00:28:52.559 --> 00:28:56.680
-Sure. Yes. They’re different
points of view, but yes, absolutely.
00:28:56.847 --> 00:28:57.847
-Yes.
00:28:58.795 --> 00:29:03.771
[music]
00:29:04.321 --> 00:29:06.902
-[sings] I go out walking.
00:29:07.828 --> 00:29:11.463
-[sings] Midnight.
Out in the-- Sorry.
00:29:11.630 --> 00:29:13.122
[laughs] [?]
00:29:13.289 --> 00:29:16.467
-It’s right there.
00:29:16.634 --> 00:29:18.314
-Oh, yes. It’s right here.
00:29:19.912 --> 00:29:21.814
Was that horrible [?]?
00:29:23.780 --> 00:29:30.780
[music]
00:29:57.699 --> 00:29:59.555
[laughter]
00:29:59.757 --> 00:30:06.757
[background conversation]
00:30:42.131 --> 00:30:44.215
I can do some markers.
00:30:45.850 --> 00:30:52.850
[music]
00:30:59.081 --> 00:31:00.791
-Let me see your face.
00:31:00.958 --> 00:31:02.684
[background conversation]
00:31:02.851 --> 00:31:07.800
-It’s a face. As faces go.
00:31:10.650 --> 00:31:14.280
-Do you have any doubts about
our doing this together?
00:31:15.361 --> 00:31:17.023
-Well, absolutely.
00:31:17.190 --> 00:31:22.740
In the notion that we’re laying more
opinions onto what already exists.
00:31:23.670 --> 00:31:26.023
The liberating part is that we don’t
00:31:26.190 --> 00:31:28.063
actually have to
agree on everything.
00:31:28.230 --> 00:31:31.003
We don’t have to agree about an
exact point of view with this music,
00:31:31.170 --> 00:31:34.213
but if we’re relatively honest,
something may happen.
00:31:34.380 --> 00:31:37.003
That’s not a horrible crime.
You know what I’m saying?
00:31:37.170 --> 00:31:39.299
-That’s the best thing
that you hope for?
00:31:39.466 --> 00:31:41.221
-That’s the worst
thing I would hope for.
00:31:41.388 --> 00:31:42.989
-What’s the best thing
that you hope for?
00:31:43.156 --> 00:31:48.799
-The best thing is of course, an
absolute transcendent, transparent,
00:31:49.660 --> 00:31:55.743
transmogrifying situation, where
it gets bigger than all of that.
00:32:02.218 --> 00:32:03.643
-Positions, please.
00:32:08.255 --> 00:32:15.255
[background conversations]
00:32:27.308 --> 00:32:34.308
[music]
00:39:18.704 --> 00:39:25.704
[music]
00:42:19.437 --> 00:42:26.437
[music]
00:53:28.834 --> 00:53:35.834
[background conversation]
Distributor: Bullfrog Films
Length: 55 minutes
Date: 1998
Genre: Expository
Language: Not available
Grade: 7-12, College, Adult
Color/BW:
Closed Captioning: Available
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