Yo La Tengo

 

Prospect Park, Brook­lyn, New York City

New York (or should I say Hobo­ken) insti­tu­tion Yo La Tengo per­forms a live score to sev­eral of French film­maker Jean Painlevé’s under­wa­ter doc­u­men­taries. Inter­est­ingly, Eng­lish sub­ti­tles indi­cate the films were appar­ently not silent in their orig­i­nal form, with nar­ra­tion and per­haps scores of their own. So not only is the audience’s expe­ri­ence of the films fil­tered through a spoken-French-to-written-English trans­la­tion, but also by Yo La Tengo’s con­tem­po­rary score.

Most of the films con­cerned the mat­ing rit­u­als and birth cycles of sea crea­tures rang­ing from octopi to mol­lusks. A rare intru­sion of a human hand is seen dur­ing the dis­sec­tion of a preg­nant male sea horse. With­out see­ing the films in their orig­i­nal form, it’s hard to judge if they were clin­i­cal or art­ful in tone. Only one film was clearly intended to be abstract: a series of images of vividly col­ored liq­uids crys­tal­iz­ing, evok­ing the “Beyond Infin­ity” sequence in 2001: A Space Odyssey. But Yo La Tengo’s musi­cal inter­pre­ta­tion trans­formed nearly every sequence into a dream­like, non-literal cin­e­matic experience.

I’m curi­ous… was the band influ­enced by the orig­i­nal sound­tracks? To what degree was the per­for­mance planned and/or improvised?

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