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TINY COLOUR MOVIES - LIVE IN TECHNOCOLOUR
John Foxx returns to the 2007 Leeds Film
Festival for an audiovisual performance of his Tiny Colour Movies
album.
At 5.30pm my wife and I were thundering up
the motorway in our automobile. I was starting to panic,
wondering how on Earth we would get to Leeds Town Hall in time
for the show’s 6pm start. However all worries were
(almost) diminished, when like a miracle, we arrived in the
city centre at 5:45pm, parking in almost the same spot where we
had one year ago when we went to see John’s Cathedral Oceans III performance.
So a mad dash from the car, sidewalking
and running in traffic, rushing through the rush hour, only to
realise we’d gone the wrong way and had to turn back and
do it all again in reverse. Eventually we found our way on to
the Headrow, where we could see the elegant and ornate clock
tower of the Town Hall. We crashed through the doors just a
minute or so into “Stray Sinatra Neurone”, so we
had missed John’s introduction, but luckily got there
just in time for the music.
The classic elegance of the Town Hall
provided the perfect setting for the show. John Foxx stood
proudly to one side of the stage in the large, airy hall of
ornate stonework. You could even feel and hear the wind blowing
straight through the building as we stared on at the tiny
colour movies in action. Cats, highways, buildings, empty
rooms, faces, keys, film stars, faces, shoes, shadows and
sunsets were just a few of the images that made up the various
short films.
Foxx remained silent throughout the
performance, with each song being introduced by on-screen text.
The running order of the songs was slightly different to the
album with some pieces being shorter too. Musically it sounded
fantastic, although some of the sharper, shrill notes screamed
down your ear, which was quite distracting. Foxx improvised in
time to the mix of Tiny Colour
Movies, occasionally glancing up to
watch the moving pictures.
New fragments of music – or loops
and arpeggiated chord structures to be precise –
accompanied the introductions to each track, some of which were
delightfully hypnotic. The main difference in the music was the
renaming of “Interlude” as “Waving”,
accompanied by a short film of people, well, waving.
What became apparent to me during the
Q&A session after the performance, was the reality of the
foundations of this project. Until now, I had concluded that
the majority of the work, particularly the stories behind each
film-maker, had been a wild figment of John’s
imagination. But now I would say I knew otherwise, with John
acknowledging many sources including the Weizcs-Bryant film
collection and the Mike Barker Archive among other names.
Whether I believed it or not, apparent
fact had suddenly become infinitely more fascinating than
fiction, and John Foxx was a self-confessed copyright thief.
Repurposing old movies and screening them to the public,
unbeknown to the original film-makers. In fact, the copyright
surrounding the tiny colour movies is the reason why there
hasn’t been a DVD release of the films. Foxx and Barker
slaved away for months on end putting the pieces together and
producing the music, only to be restricted to sneaking them out
at events like this.
It is only after seeing this complete
performance, that I could only begin to fully understand and
appreciate Tiny Colour Movies. Without seeing the films, you’re only
getting half of the experience. I don’t doubt that I will
yearn to see them again with every future play of the album.
Foxx clearly has a passion for this new
mash-up medium, and with another 40 or 50 film fragments in the
pipeline, there could very easily be a Tiny Colour Movies II somewhere
on a distant horizon.
Review by Alex Storer
12.11.07
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Thanks to...
Rob Harris, Steve Malins, Peter Young,
everyone from the Metamatic forum, and of course John Foxx and
Louis Gordon.
Credits...
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