Posts Tagged ‘ music

Media Madness: Annie is Not Okay. Michael Jackson: 8/29/58 – 6/25/09

In Media Madness, Matt. Murray reviews, revisits and rambles about comics, cartoons and their interactions in and with related media.

jackson 5ive

Anyone with a conscious memory of the latter half of the 20th Century will probably have at least one wisp of thought related to Michael Joseph Jackson, the self-professed Prince, and then, self-crowned King of Pop. While his talent, and it was immense, lied mainly in the field of crafting and performing danceable R&B and Pop music, like most people born in the advent of motion pictures and television, he definitely had the desire to be a movie and TV star.

His music videos leave a lasting legacy of boundary pushing cinematic techniques and unique storytelling, that not only complemented his music but undoubtedly drove his album and video sales into the stratosphere. Is it any wonder, then, that the “Moonman” MTV presents for Lifetime Achievement in the Field of Music Video was once called the “Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award”?

Unfortunately, beyond his turn as the Scarecrow in The Wiz and his appearance as Captain EO in a Disney theme park “experience,” notoriety as an actor seemed to allude Michael and in his scattered multi-media experience his defining character turned out to be himself.  He was given a cameo in the second Men in Black film as “Agent M” an alien begging for a spot on the MIB team, and he left a handful of animated credits to his name voicing or inspiring characters that were in one way or another a version of himself.

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Hippasus Gurgles: “I am a DJ, I am what I play”

On most Fridays, Michael Carlisle examines the world “outside” sequential art to find… more sequential art. Expect mathematics and a dash of pessimistic optimism.

I spend a lot of time thinking about the difference between sequences of things and the “time series” those things make. I’ve been straying somewhat from the standard ideas of “sequential art” in what I talk about on this blog; I’m not about to stop now.

Even though I’ve already stated that music, as a temporally-based art, isn’t a sequential art, I firmly believe that the careful construction of a sequence of pieces of art is an art in itself, regardless of the type of art being sequenced.

As a species, we’ve been recording sound for about 130 years. From the beginnings, the wax cylinder and gramophone recordA1 allowed the rich, then the public, to have recordings of audio in their homes. It also allowed, with radio, the evolution of a societal position – the Master of Ceremonies – to move from the religious meeting or performance hall into ever-shrinking boxes in people’s homes. The MC could also become the DJ, gaining the power to sequence acts from their recordings instead of collecting them into one room to perform live. The little discs could be swapped in a two-turntable setup which allowed a predefined (or on-the-fly) sequence to be constructed. The art of the DJ is not the music; it is the sequence of music.

I got two turntables and a microphone
I got plastic on my mind….A2

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