Legende d'Eer (2005)

Legende d'Eer (2005)
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Conceptual artist Iannis Xenakis (who died in 2001) composed La Legende d'Eer, an electroacoustic work for seven-track tape, to commemorate the opening of the Centre Pompidou in Paris in 1978. It featured scattered shards of orchestral sound and cacophonous noises. Xenakis ran the tape continuously for several months straight (in a loop) as an aural accompaniment to the visual splendor of Le Diatope, a massive convex architectural structure he designed and built, fitted with four lasers, 400 mirrors, and 1680 pulsating lights. In the late seventies, documentarist Bruno Rastoin edited hundreds of images of the initial creation into a single film, which forever preserves the memory of Xenakis's exhibit. That film is now available in the home video release Legende d'Eer. The program features a soundtrack remastered from the seven-track tapes originally used in the exhibition, and a bonus interview with Xenakis conducted by musicologist Harry Halbreich. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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DVD
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Synopsis of Legende d'Eer

Conceptual artist Iannis Xenakis (who died in 2001) composed La Legende d'Eer, an electroacoustic work for seven-track tape, to commemorate the opening of the Centre Pompidou in Paris in 1978. It featured scattered shards of orchestral sound and cacophonous noises. Xenakis ran the tape continuously for several months straight (in a loop) as an aural accompaniment to the visual splendor of Le Diatope, a massive convex architectural structure he designed and built, fitted with four lasers, 400 mirrors, and 1680 pulsating lights. In the late seventies, documentarist Bruno Rastoin edited hundreds of images of the initial creation into a single film, which forever preserves the memory of Xenakis's exhibit. That film is now available in the home video release Legende d'Eer. The program features a soundtrack remastered from the seven-track tapes originally used in the exhibition, and a bonus interview with Xenakis conducted by musicologist Harry Halbreich. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
47 mins
Categories:
Special Interest
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    Linda W.

    The description makes it sound enigmatic, but resist the temptation to find out what this song's all about. Granted, some people might like it under some influences, but the song's mostly really annoying. The music sounds entirely synthesized, yet still almost entirely organic. The first part mimics the high pitched, incessant chirps of crickets, which, if you've ever heard crickets at night, is extremely annoying. Some of the sounds are still burned in my mind and I suppose that's a compliment, but I'd have to give an extremely conditional recommendation. The images are mostly incomprehensible pictures of dotted lights and dark space--with a few lasers thrown in. Thematically, it's very similar to 2001, with a scientific and spiritual awe of space and the universe, and so, if you like the trippy scene from 2001conveyed in less colorful stills (which, in retrospect, is kind of infectious) plus high pitched, organic-synthetic music, you might like this.

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