Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Day 3,476 (well, it feels like it anyway)

It's December. It's ridiculously cold by Austin standards. Naturally, we shot outside yesterday.

Dániel Perlaky of Indierect Records, and Victor Moyers, a big player on Austin's creative scene met up with us at Spider House. The two of them have great insight into what's going on with the arts in this town right now, and they're fascinating to watch when interacting. The agreeing! The disagreeing! The idea exchanging! Seriously, they have a crazy energy, and this back and forth thing going on that's fantastic.

Later the crew went to film a Fresh Boy Crew session, which was pretty intense. Good intense, not bad intense. I repeat: this film is going to be amazing.

Today we had a big meeting and the post-production ball is officially rolling. Which is great, since we're breaking for the holidays at the end of this week. If you don't hear from us for a bit, check back in January!

**EDIT: I just saw some of the footage from the Fresh Boy Crew meeting last night, and it is b a d a s s

Sunday, December 14, 2008

We've stopped counting days

Yesterday morning the crew woke up at 5 to get shots of the city at sunrise. Later, we were going to film the Undiscovered Austin show at the Mohawk, since we filmed some stuff with Fresh Boy Crew on Friday, but ended up not shooting.

On my way home I stopped for a taco at El Chilito, and saw a girl putting up a Finally Punk/Cry Blood Apache flier for a show at Emo's on the 27th. I struck up a conversation, and it turns out she's a member of Finally Punk, which I found very exciting, since they're a band I have a special fondness for. It's a 4-piece all girl band with a great sense of humor and a fun stage presence that isn't all that easy to come by. I just thought it was a nice Austin moment. My iPod is no longer a little device that holds my music, but a living entity running around town and showing up at Bouldin Creek and the local taco stand. Is this what tourists in Hollywood feel like?

Today we're shooting a continuation of an interview I did with Cari from Belaire a few months ago, for my other blog. This time I get to go in with two incredible cameras, which is pretty exciting! I know I may have a biased opinion on the subject, but the way this film is coming together and the quality of the work we're doing... I'm just saying, you guys should be very excited. Great things are happening here.

Friday, December 12, 2008

The crew met up at Bouldin Creek yesterday afternoon, to shoot an interview with some interesting folks. We had initially planned to interview Miguel Hinojosa, and asked him to bring a few friends along. Continuing with our aversion to talking head interviews, we wanted to hear what Miguel had to say, but in the context of a conversation with others.

Miguel has been involved with a lot of local bands, including Belaire and Voxtrot. He's also the man you can thank for most of the Austin bands (including Cari and Belaire) involved in the Indie Translations of the College Dropout, the greatest Kanye West tribute album you'll ever find. Belaire's version of Through the Wire is pretty outstanding.

Miguel also brought his friends Erik Wofford - who's worked with Voxtrot, Belaire, Black Angels and the Octopus Project among many others - Forrest Allen and Jason Riquelmy. They talked about local music and how it's changed since the early 90's, the Live Music Task Force, and the politics surrounding being a musician in Austin. Miguel's girlfriend Angela also came and gave her two cents, which was great not only because she had great things to add, but because it lent some diversity to the conversation.

We've been trying very hard to make this film as diverse as possible, both in the scope of race and gender. I must admit, though, if you're trying to document indie music culture in this town (note: indie music, not just indie rock), it's not that easy to balance the reality of the landscape with the level of diversity you find in it.

Also, a great moment from yesterday: as we were shooting establishing shots of Bouldin Creek Coffehouse, I went around, as per usual, to ask those featured in said shots to sign a release form. I started talking with a couple of guys a few tables away, and as it turns out, one of them was none other than Michael Bell, who's been playing drums with Crystal Castles. He's also been involved with Balmorhea and American Analog Set, so I think it's fair to say he's a pretty interesting guy. Nathan and I were both excited, since we're Crystal Castles fans and all, so of course I proposed the idea to Michael of getting him involved with the film. So far he seems interested, we'll see what develops...

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Dallas

We drove in to Dallas today to pick up the thread of the Mellow Owl (aka. Peter and the Wolf) tour.

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What's cool about Dallas: that building to the right has a hole in it. That's about it. We got some cool shots of the skyline, though, and the weather was wonderfully eerie.

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We strapped the camera to the roof of our van using a cinesaddle and drove along the highway a few times until Nathan and Rob were happy with what they got.

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Reviewing footage atop the car, next to a Novelty Mart -- when Rob was readjusting the camera, someone from behind the bushes threw a rock at him. Unfazed yet cautious, we pulled over at a different exit the next time around.

We went to dinner at one of Dallas' many (many many) fine chain restaurants, and then got a few Dallas culture shots before we went to film the Mellow Owl show. It's funny -- I thought it would be a relief to finally have a reason to speak with my favorite bands, other than declarations of fandom which, admittedly, I avoid because of their awkward nature. Sometimes you're just awkward no matter what, though. Besides which, there's something bizarre about seeing a band live that you've listened to for a long time.

Before and after the show they're people in a bar, but there's a separate moment when they're onstage, personifying moments and memories and attachments to sound you've developed while listening to their music. For some reason, it's still odd to me to reconcile the two, and the process of translating it onto film and making it come to life is what seems to be putting everything into a tangible context.

After the show we drove around town a bit more to get shots of the cityscape up close. It was raining something vicious, but we made it work and got some great stuff. It's late now and sleep is creeping up on me very stealthily, so I will leave you with this:

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Getting Dallas culture on film...

Sunday, December 7, 2008

In and Out of the Glowing City

by Nathan Christ

A luminous day with Bill Baird - a 360-degree artist. I call him this because he can express himself from seemingly every angle. He can speak articulately about his life's pursuit, he can draw, paint, play multiple instruments, toss down lyrics in moments flat, and thrive in the studio, stealthily going after the sound he knows is on the tip of his mind. It's bigger than just the music. We filmed him for half of the day, touching on topics from urban development to culture hounds, from his vegetable oil-fueled car to Walt Whitman. He talked about Soundteam being picked up by Capitol records and painted out a hilarious scene of a some guy (maybe A&R) with a backwards baseball cap courting the band around a table with a $500 bottle of Dom Perignon. That was the moment he looked around and realized there was some corporate trouble afoot.

There was ease today after the relative stress of the last few days. The project challenges us every time we go out there, forces us to rapidly re-assess our preconceived ideas of people's desires and motives.

Once the subjects in the film get past the fact that Robert and I look like Robocops with our cameras and shoulder mounts, they trust us more. Bill from the Honeybears and the Harlequins called a camera, with its intense light trained on him, "the blaster." Red Hunter's band simply thought they looked too much like TV cameras. Odd what YouTube and mini cell phone technology have done to people's perceptions of larger, higher quality cameras. As if, by virtue of their quality, they aren't authentic. That's missing the point, I think. We all have our tools, and these are ours, and they are going to give us a beautiful final product.

It makes me wonder why a documentary of this nature hasn't been made in recent years about ATX. I mean, low-res videos abound. Friends shooting friends. Everyone's on camera all the time. But we're attempting to find some shred of sense in it, with good quality image and sound. As much as I love the rawness of the Velvet Underground Quine Tapes, we want to up the quality. And trust me, we are definitely boot-strapping it. We are the definition of a skeleton crew. But I think being only a 3-4 person crew allows us to better engage with the world in front of us. We can be in the moment and follow the energy more spontaneously.

Like the way Wim Wenders filmed Houston in Paris, TX - long tracking shots across expansive banks, staring through the camera with wide-eyed wonder at a giant construction crane with a proud American flag flapping on top. A brilliant and curious German exploring the intricacies and excesses of another culture as he finds them, insidious or commonplace as we Texans might find them to be. We're making this film not just for the people here, but for some guy named Jorg in Stockholm, who thinks people ride horses and screw sheep in Texas (I've been accused of both, completely straight-faced, during some of my travels.)

This is why our trips to Dallas and Houston, commencing tomorrow, will be interesting. We'll come up for air to look at another side of Texas before we submerge back in.

Ch-ch-ch-changes

Alas, our part in the Peter and the Wolf/Mellow Owl tour has been deferred until the Dallas show on Monday. I can't lie, it was somewhat disheartening. A lot of time and energy went into preparing for it, not to mention enough enthusiasm to challenge a small child on Christmas/Chanukah/Kwanza morning. Things happen, though, and we just have to roll with it.

Even though we've always kept it in mind, this emphasized the importance and relevance of approaching each group of artists in a unique way that suits them. We're trying to give everyone the respect they deserve without crowding them or creating a disingenuous image. Whether that means focusing on them without categorizing or making them into a part of "the scene," or if it's just filming someone walking down a street -- or not. Sometimes just filming someone walking makes them self conscious, and then you've already lost the truth of that moment.

Despite the disappointment of deferring the tour, we got right back into gear and reshuffled the schedule so we didn't lose any time in terms of shooting. I even got a full refund on the car rental, which makes me think that somewhere the gods of something are still smiling benevolently upon this project. Last night we shot a show at Hole in the Wall with The Harlequins, who have Bill from Black Joe Lewis' Honeybears on bass and keyboard. They played a great set, I took a few pictures for y'all to see:

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Nathan, Rob and Dave are meeting with Bill Baird right now, and tomorrow morning we're heading up to Dallas to meet up with Red Hunter and the band. Stay tuned...

Friday, December 5, 2008

Creekside Lounge Allstars

Tonight at Creekside Lounge, three of the four bands playing were ones we're following! Naturally, we were there to film it all. Cari's (of Belaire fame) other project School Police opened, followed by a band called Reverse X-Rays, then {{{sunset}}} and finally Peter and the Wolf.

All the bands gave strong and unique performances. The only one I'd seen perform before tonight was {{{sunset}}}, so it was great to have a chance not see more than one band I love for the first time in a single night. I'm beginning to think I've moved into my iPod. It sure seems that way.

Filming went really well, and with the use of our newly acquired stereo microphone, the sound for this film is going to be fantastic. It's not all fun and games, though -- by the end of the night all of us were beyond exhausted. Rest is nowhere in sight either, since in a few hours we're hitting the road with Red Hunter and his band (Peter and the Wolf aka. Mellow Owl) for a week! I'm torn between being extremely excited and wanting to sleep for days. However, duty calls...

Before I go, though, here are some pictures from tonight's show. Special thanks to Ceci Norman for the use of her camera lens, which is far superior to my own. I would also like to thank everyone who found me tonight and complimented me on this blog so far. It seemed like at least half of tonight's Creekside audience is reading this, and I was slightly flabbergasted at all the enthusiasm. Thanks for reading (tell your friends)!

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School Police

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I tried to get a candid shot of Cari and Nathan but she caught me


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{{{sunset}}}



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Bill Baird of {{{sunset}}}


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Peter and the Wolf / Mellow Owl


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Nathan getting yet another great shot


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Red Hunter

Check back Saturday night for a tour update!

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Pennebaker, Empire, {{{sunset}}}

The Independent Culture Project Sunset (Bill Baird) Involvement 28 November 2008
Nathan Christ

1)
I plan to use Sunset’s ‘When Perfect Flames Expire’ over the opening sequence of our film. The song sounds like a gritty carnival – it’s the 3-way lovechild of the White Album, Van Dyke Parks, and Dusty Springfield, the male-female dialogue like an amped-up Serge Gainsbourg track. I’ve now been listening to the song constantly for months. It’s a secret compulsion. Robert Garza (Director of Photography) and I plan to film our city as a living, breathing character.

Picture this: we truck through the streets of the Red River district at dusk, the sun glowing on the horizon, casting its dramatic shadows against the city’s wandering inhabitants as they prepare themselves for another Friday night. We shoot the tops of buildings at play with the cranes. We shoot them at regular exposure once and then from the same angle with the gain on the camera pumped way up. Gain is typically used in extreme low-light situations – when used in the daytime, it creates a noisy, dirty, busy look in the frame. In post-production, we lay over the clean, perfectly-exposed image on the buildings under a high-gain image of the sky. We fade the gain from a particularly intense level in a halo around the buildings to a blue, regularly-exposed sky. The resulting effect: the city looks like it is glowing with grit. It is a strangely synergistic fit, as Sunset’s wonderful and haunting album is called The Glowing City.

It should be noted here that, while the bulk of our film is being shot on 2 glorious Sony Z7U-HDV cameras, we still plan to employ mixed media (ie. Black and white 16mm film, Canon GL-2 MiniDV, and the sneaky flip cams – ie. Belaire’s East and West Coast tours – more on those later). This opening sequence will be a veritable cornucopia of these formats.

Halfway through the sequence, the sun, well, sets. We return to the corners of Austin with the most musical activity: East Side streets housing venues like the warehouse, Red Scoot Inn, Victory Grille, North Loop, and back to the Red River district, the public epicenter of the film. We truck through as bands load in, fans line up, and all the colorful characters come out for the night.

It is here that we present all the performers in the documentary so the audience understands who they are later. As the great D.A. Pennebaker (Don’t Look Back, Monterey Pop, Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars) once said, even if your documentary follows one or two people, they will be complete strangers to a distant audience. The issue multiples when you have an ensemble production like ours. Pennebaker also advises against “hanging signs” on the people you’re photographing (ie. John Blow, Architect, Rebel) or some such thing.

Related to this is my intense aversion to the typical “talking head” interview. Just watch a music documentary like American Hardcore to see what I mean. You have these powerhouse performers (Henry Rollins of Black Flag, H.R. from Bad Brains) sitting in a well-lit space telling us how we shoulda been there. We still have to bring forth the context of all the music we’re seeing, though, so we’re trying to structure our interviews as “conversations,” shooting with a long lens dialogues with various musicians, managers, press, writers, club owners, etc, as if we’re voyeurs watching something unfold through a crowd. I want to drift from band to band. I want the pace of the film to be as kinetic as the music it depicts. I also am trying to use the word “conversation” instead of “interview” because I was affected by something else Pennebaker said when asked why he avoids interviews. He said that when you point a question at a subject, you are giving the answer before they even open their mouth.

2) Back to Sunset. To my knowledge, Bill Baird is the only musician we are following that has been signed by a major label, in his case, Capitol, who controlled distribution for the terrific Movie Monster, the 2004 release from his previous band Soundteam. Capitol ultimately dropped Soundteam and they disbanded. There is something to be said for the driving endurance these artists all have in the face of this sort of disappointment. Austin’s lack of a music industry plays into this. As folksinger Trey Brown said recently, “We don’t have an industry here, we have a culture.” I hope to get insight on all this from Bill and perhaps other members of Soundteam.

{{{sunset}}} at Antone's

3) I think it’s also best not to dwell too much on what’s happened in the past. Robert and I have talked about creating a musical mosaic of one of Sunset’s songs, probably “You’ve Never Lived a Day in Your Life” (originally a Soundteam tune). The importance of the studio in Bill’s music can’t be overstated. He layers and affects many of the instruments he plays himself. The idea, while still not fleshed out, is to shoot Bill in a recording space as he creates a song from soup-to-nuts. We hope to shoot the master wide shot with an extremely high-definition camera (perhaps the newest RED cam) and have Bill perform the entire song instrument-by-instrument. This shot will be locked down on a tripod.

Transposed over this master shot will be a collection of other shots, filmed with multiple cameras (of lower screen resolution), each focusing on very specific details (fingers on keys, close-ups of Bill singing, adjusting levels, adding effects, etc. etc.) We we will need upwards of ten cameras, all at varying angles, to execute this.

{{{sunset}}}

When the song really gets going, the smaller frames could perhaps take us elsewhere (blinking city lights, hordes of people walking in slow motion, abstract, elegiac images). The sky’s the limit. The idea is that the master wide shot is what motivates the smaller images. As the song reaches its end, the frames disappear one-by-one, leaving Bill alone in the recording space. Beyond depicting a great song, hopefully this scene will speak to Bill’s innovation as well as what can be done with new technologies.

We don’t have the money to pull this off just yet, and it will require impeccable planning, but I don’t think the film we are making will be complete without it. We aren’t just documenting something. We are participants. For a distant influence to this, watch the scene in Gus Vant’s Last Days, where the Kurt Cobain character creates a cacophony of noise in his single room as the camera patiently pulls back. 4) Finally, Bill has a lot of ideas that he’s bringing to the project. He told us The Glowing City has always been a concept album. He wants us to shoot a long, unbroken shot of him riding a Greyhound bus to San Antonio, then a long, unbroken shot of his father, disheveled, riding back to Austin. Ideally the entire sequence will clock in right at 80 minutes, the exact length of The Glowing City album (which also happens to be the maximum amount of time a CD will allow). We’re down. It might only get played through a projector at a large gathering, but we are down. The fact is, the footage will exist, and I think that has value. Surely we’ll find a way to incorporate it into the greater film. After bringing up the idea, Bill talked about people turning on to Warhol in the mid-60’s partly because he had the capital to attract people. Hype and public perception can twist a direct image into something strange and grandiose. Perhaps it challenges us to look at life through an altered lens. I got through part of Warhol’s Empire, the eight-hour film depicting nothing but the Empire State Building lording over Manhattan. I’d be full of shit if I told you I enjoyed it, but I did gasp when a bird flew by, one of the film’s dramatic peaks. I started talking like this to Bill, flatly over-thinking it, and he said, “No, I want the bus shot to be oppressively boring.” And that was that. We’re checking Greyhound schedules. In conclusion, I’ll leave you with another quote from local troubadour Trey Brown, which we thankfully caught on film. “I think we’re just lightning rods,” he said, “and we have to be ready to raise ourselves up when the lightning comes.” “Where does the lightning come from?” I asked. “Necessity.”

Friday, November 28, 2008

The Independent Culture Project: What It Means

I thought it would be nice to use this Thanksgiving weekend lull to put up a more detailed account of what this project is about. Where it came from, why we're doing it, all that fun stuff. Here's the official mission statement, composed by Nathan (aka. Director/Fearless Leader).

Note: This was written in July 2008, before we began speaking with some of the bands in the film. The project has naturally evolved into something bigger, but this provides a nice glimpse into ICP when it was just a seed.

Austin, TX is known worldwide as the "Live Music Capital of the World." But what exactly does this mean? Certainly the SXSW and Austin City Limits music festivals both provide powerhouse performances from cutting edge local and international musicians. But, when the herds of fans flock home and the stages are torn down, where does the music go? It is alive and well and it can be found in the main stages, back rooms, and rooftops of Austin's premiere music venues. Club de Ville and the Mohawk are part of Austin's Red River music district and feature nightly an array of genre-splitting artists like Belaire, White Denim, Peter & the Wolf, and Black Joe Lewis and the Honeybears. Situated side-by-side, Mohawk and De Ville rest in the heart of a city changing at a feverish pace.










Belaire





Black Joe Lewis and the Honeybears








White Denim





Like the watershed music documentary 'Heartworn Highways,' which covers the country music scene in Austin and Nashville in the early 1970s, our documentary will focus on the creative process of each band. As we drift through the musings, personalities, and dreams of each artist, the puzzle pieces will begin to lock together and a larger picture will be revealed. Some of these groups find themselves at the cusp of commercial success (whether they want it or not), a great triumph in a city where you can see hundreds of performers every night of the week. This film will be a crucial document in the years to come. It will allow the distant viewer to look through opera glasses into the mythic music culture of central Texas.

In 1979, UCLA graduate Penelope Spheeris (later to be the director of Wayne's World) and a film crew took their 16mm cameras into the ruinous streets of the so-called L.A. punk scene. In her documentary 'The Decline of Western Civilization,' Spheeris depicts a world in a state of near-anarchy, as groups like X, Black Flag, and the Germs blur the lines between rage, politics, poverty, and music. The beauty of her particular form of documentary lies in that it confronts a particular moment in history, when the future seemed unwritten. Unlike later documentaries about the same period like 'American Hardcore,' 'Western Civilization' is not looking back on an era with rosy-colored glasses. It is made by a fan wanting to dig deeper not only into the music itself, but the surrounding sociological factors, the press, and the upheaval of the American identity proper. It feels unsafe, volatile, alive. The film acts as a primary influence for ours.


A feature film will be created, interweaving night after night of performances with the footage we gather throughout the city's many vibrant corners, from renovated churches-turn-private studios to highway overpasses housing secret performances to the rising star Fun Fun Fun fest. We'll also gather rare interviews with local members of the press, fans, managers, skeptics, and independent record company owners, like Dániel Perlaky of Indierect Records. The movie's format and aesthetic will change according to the sounds and attitudes of the musicians. For instance, because Belaire's style is full of popping, bright colors, pristine High Definition Video is most suitable, while White Denim's aggressive, ramshackle threesome might best be represented with black and white 16mm film.


Our film will tell not only a fascinating story about the way of the modern artist, but will reveal something about the kaleidoscopic world of Austin.


Wednesday, November 26, 2008

PSA

If anyone in Austin has a truck, van, or minivan that they'd like to lend us for a week in December, please let me know ASAP. You'll get a thank you credit in the film at the very least. Email me at icpblog@gmail.com -- thanks!

Monday, November 24, 2008

Day 9 - rain is not my friend today

We had to cancel our shoot today because of the weather. So, we did some work around the office, mostly catching up on footage and preliminary editing. We watched a lot of the stuff we got of various scenesters commenting on Austin's music, and... ok, it's not Williamsburg, I'll grant you that. But there is some serious douchebaggery afoot in this town. I guess that's any scene, though. You're always going to get your share of self-important idiots, and putting them in front of a camera will just inflate their ego. So really, we're kind of asking for it. If you think about it, these people are a pretty big part of this culture, so regardless of how ridiclous they can be (and believe me, there are no boundaries), it's all a part of the whole picture.

Then went over to the Drafthouse theatre to see Let The Right One In, a Swedish sort-of-horror/vampire movie.
I'm a total and utter wuss and normally it's impossible to get me into anything scary and/or gory, but the guys said it wasn't really bloody. Plus, at this stage in the game, I'd feel like kind of a jerk passing up a "bonding" opportunity with the crew. I mean, the more we know each other, the better, so I can probably live with a few scenes worth of staring at my shoes.

They weren't lying either, the gore was pretty minimal and the film was actually pretty good. Beautifully shot and composed, and an interesting story at that. The vampire in question is actually a 12 year old girl and the story is more about the relationship between her and a boy she befriends. In a way it was lovely, and in another it was horribly depressing. I don't want to spoil it, but you should see it if you can (before some big American studio buys it and disembowels it of all its atmosphere and soul only to give it a few week run and send it to DVD).

What's almost more significant, though, is that I had my first introduction to the Drafthouse theatre chain (I've only been here a week y'all - I don't know much of what's around town, I just know I can use "y'all" all the time and no one even blinks!). OK, so the Drafthouse is awesome because they have wooden boards (aka. tables) like two feet from your seat in every row, which have menus on them. From which you can order. Food. And drinks. And waiters come and fill your order during the movie. I'm not sure why this is so exciting to me, but it really is. In case you're interested (and I know you are), I ordered a hummus plate - red pepper hummus, pita, and vegetables. The hummus was pretty great and the pita soft and fresh. As for the vegetables, I can only speak for the pepper and carrot sticks, which were fresh and crunchy and all sorts of delicious. The celery remained untouched, since I hate that vegetable with the fire of a thousand prehistoric volcanoes.

All in all, it was still a productive day, in more ways than originally planned. We went back to the office afterward, and Nathan was still editing when I left. We're breaking for Thanksgiving on Tuesday, but I may still go in and mess around with editing some stuff. I may or may not be blogging about that, though. I think I'll save my literary prowess for the shows we're filming on the 3rd and 4th (Mckinney Park campfire and a show at Creekside - {{{SUNSET}}}, Peter and the Wolf, School Police, and oh! so much more). And of course there will be the Peter and the Wolf tour, and the hot Belaire action that'll be going down before Christmas.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Day 8

The boys went to Church House Studios and shot some great stuff with Trey Brown. Tomorrow we're filming some interviews and probably going through footage.

We also went to Cari's birthday party (Cari of Belaire fame), where we spent far too much time sitting around the fire and talking about work. Not that we didn't have other stuff to talk about, we're just all workaholics. So it goes. We did do some socializing, and you just can't go wrong with a fire pit. Dave is really good at stoking a fire, by the way. I hear he does parties, if anyone out there needs a professional fire-stoker.

Did I mention we're slated to go on tour with Red Hunter and Peter & the Wolf for a week? Because we are. What's got two thumbs and is the most excited, ever? That's right.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Day 6

The crew met up at the office and went over to Antone's at noon, for the march to City Hall in support of the Live Music Task Force (or rather, of creating a central music office for it). The mood at Antone's was anticipatory and lively. People brought guitars and drums, which usually show up at every protest anyway, but for once they were being played by professionals (and man, does that make all the difference). A few local news crews showed up as well - it was definitely an event.

We got some really interesting footage I think, mostly of people just having conversations. Nathan and Rob would literally find people who seemed to be having interesting discussions, roll up behind them and start filming (naturally we got their permission to actually use the footage afterward - or rather, I did, being the one with the release forms in hand). There were all sorts of people: a young guy and a girl, two dapper gentlemen in nice shirts, a bunch of dudes just hanging out outside talking about music etc.

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Rob and Nathan inside Antone's, finding their shot

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Dave and Nathan casually recording these dudes' conversation (Rob's arm stage right)

Finally, we all walked over a few blocks to City Hall, holding signs and singing and doing your run of the mill protest-y things. Nathan was running back and forth in the crowd trying to get all the good moments, while Dave tailed him and tried to stay out of shot. Rob was somewhere too, but I didn't see him since I was busy following Nathan's trail of close-ups with my relentless pursuit of signed release forms.

When we got into City Hall, the march ground to a halt - ironically - as we all passed through the security checkpoint one by one. The rest of the crew went ahead into the main chamber to set up and find good spots - I followed eventually, with the camera bags in tow.

The agenda finally got to the central music office (momentum was dented again a bit as we walked in on a meeting about libraries), and the crowd went nuts. After various aspects of the case in favor of the office were presented, it was approved, to many cheers. The mood was jubilant, and people seemed pretty happy. I've only been here a week (well, a week tomorrow), but even I could perceive the wave of relief and pleasant expectation that swept through the crowd. Well, what was left of it, anyway - a few people had drifted away, most likely back to their places of work, since this meeting was in the middle of the day on a Thursday.

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Awaiting the decision in the City Hall main chamber

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The Austin City Council - check out Rob crouched on the left!

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Post-decision revelling. Still finding shots. We don't rest. Ever.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Day 5

We shot a great interview with James Moody of the Mohawk today. We set up before they opened for the night, so the lights were pretty bright and the place was empty. There's always something eerie about being at a music venue before or after hours when the lights are on. Like it's just another room or something -- the magic of the sounds and atmosphere are somehow crushed and melted away by the brightness.

The interview was really interesting. Nathan and Moody talked a lot about the Live Music Task Force, and the march to City Hall tomorrow to hand over the new list of recommendations. There was also a lot of talk about the Mohawk and other Austin venues, and some interesting stuff about White Denim.

Then we headed back to the office to go over footage. Now, however, I am tired and have a big day to prep for...

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Day 4 - The Crew Smells Like Fish

So, when he's not busy rocking everyone's face off, Joe Lewis has a day job delivering goods for Quality Seafood. We tagged along - both in the back of the delivery van, and following him with one of our cars. Oh, yeah. We're good. Though we may end up not using most of the footage we shot from our car, but Joe is pretty rad and said some great things. Which made it totally worthwhile for Nathan to be sitting in whatever miscellaneous liquid it was that he was sitting in all morning. My bet is on fish juice.

Joe Lewis at Quality Seafood
Dave and Rob getting Joe stocking his van.

Joe Lewis delivering quality seafood
Nathan, Dave and Rob filming Joe making a delivery.

He and Dave spent a good portion of the morning in the back of the van - so our cameras couldn't see them - as Rob and I shot out the back window of our car. Rob was tied down with some slack line, the back window tied up with rope, the seats folded down and both of us doing our best to keep the cameras steady (which, of course, was much more important than our actual safety - we're just bad ass like that). Eventually Rob ended up in the back of the van, and Nathan got to ride up front.

Dan and Nathan filming Joe Lewis
Rob shooting out of the back of the car.

After a brief pause for tacos and regrouping at the office (sharing cars and small offices with fishy boys = not recommended), Nathan, Dave and I went over to Cari's house to meet with Belaire about the coming weeks of filming as they prep for recording their new album. I was kind of concerned before going in, because, after all, they're a tight-knit group and we're fast becoming one of our own, too. I think the greatest worry Nathan and I share is that our cameras may be invasive to the artists and their work. Once the meeting got going, though, all my fears were dispelled. The band are all open to us and the collaboration, and I think that once we begin sharing space and figuring out how we all work together, things will really take off. I can't wait to see their new material and how they develop it into the album.

Seriously, I actually get paid for this.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Day 3

I've spent the past couple of days catching up on footage, mostly of the ATX Converge show. It all looks amazing. We've invested what money we have in camera equipment, and it was really really worth it. Everything looks and sounds amazing. I'd already seen the cut of the White Denim show and their energy is unbelievable. Black Joe Lewis really blew me away too, with their funk and their rhythm and badass vibe. And Belaire's stage version of one of the new songs they've been working on is all sorts of awesome.

I'm so excited about this project, I... I don't even know what to say. I can't believe I actually get to do this, and work with these people, both the film crew and the musicians. Tomorrow we're shooting with Black Joe Lewis while he works, and then meet with Cari from Belaire and the band's manager, Dániel. Danny, the drummer/sound engineer may attend too. It's promising to be a pretty amazing few months from here on out.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Day 1(ish)

"Hey, how would you like to move to Austin, TX and get paid to work with your favorite bands?"

Would you say no? I sure didn't. Which is why I packed up my car and drove to Austin to work on this film. Nathan, our fearless leader and director, Rob, the man behind the camera, and Dave, the master of sound, have already gotten some amazing footage of White Denim and Trey Brown. We'll be spending time with Black Joe Lewis, Bill Baird and {{{Sunset}}}, a week touring with Red Hunter and Peter & the Wolf, a good chunk of time in the studio with Belaire as they record their new album, and various other bands as we go along. We'll also be following the effects of the noise restrictions the city has imposed on the Red River District and the rift between the music culture and City Hall.

We're trying to capture this music and its home in the most authentic way we can. All of us are pretty broke and are in it for the love of the work and the music - which sounds too good to be true, but it actually is. Finally, I am among my people. In fact, all the random knowledge I have about Austin bands seems to suddenly be a special skill. I'm not even sure what to do with that much awesome, but I'm sure I'll figure something out.

All I know right now is that I'm beyond thrilled to be working with these bands, especially Belaire, who are very near and dear to my heart. I thought that since the internet and the music blog world was what brought me to this scene, I would chronicle this experience in a blog as well. I'll try to write every day and follow the story as it unfolds. Occasionally other crew members may post a guest entry, so keep your eyes peeled. As of today, my life will be nothing but a total and complete immersion in the Austin indie rock scene. Awesome? You bet it is.