Daniel Lanois: Here Is What Is

Here Is What Is movie poster

 

Daniel Lanois is a unique musi­cian, as gifted a singer-songwriter in his own right as he is a col­lab­o­ra­tor and pro­ducer. I orig­i­nally came to rec­og­nize his name after find­ing it listed in the cred­its of many key items in The Dork Report’s for­mi­da­ble music col­lec­tion, includ­ing Peter Gabriel’s So and Us, U2’s The Joshua Tree and Achtung Baby, and Bob Dylan’s Oh Mercy and Time Out of Mind. His 1993 solo album For the Beauty of Wynona remains an all-time per­sonal favorite.

The fea­ture doc­u­men­tary Here Is What Is pre­miered at the Toronto Film Fes­ti­val in 2007, directed by Lanois, Adam Samuels, and Adam Vol­lick. It cap­tures the record­ing of the album of the same name, but also serves as a kind of ret­ro­spec­tive and mis­sion state­ment. Con­ver­sa­tions between Lanois and early men­tor (now equal) Brian Eno punc­tu­ate the film. Lanois states to Eno his inten­tions for the movie: to cre­ate a film about the beauty of music, not every­thing that sur­rounds it (which I took to mean hagiog­ra­phy, celebrity gos­sip, and the some­times tedious behind-the-sceens doc­u­men­ta­tion typ­i­cal of the genre). Eno sug­gests that his film should try to show peo­ple that art often grows out of noth­ing, or from the sim­plest of seeds in the right sit­u­a­tions, not from what out­siders might assume are the mirac­u­lous inspi­ra­tions of allegedly bril­liant or gifted artistes.

Daniel Lanois and Brian Eno in Here Is What IsDaniel Lanois and Brian Eno record­ing their new ambi­ent mas­ter­work, “Music for Staircases”

Lanois is Cana­dian by birth, but has a spe­cial affin­ity for the Amer­i­can South, espe­cially New Orleans. He cred­its New Orleans for the orig­i­nal sen­sual groove that formed the basis of rock music. Per­haps intended as a visual echo of this the­ory, the stun­ningly beau­ti­ful Car­olina Cerisola often appears danc­ing in her scanties.

Lanois details his long­time, fruit­ful col­lab­o­ra­tion with drum­mer Brian Blade. Leg­endary key­boardist of The Band, Garth Hud­son, also joins them in the stu­dio for some truly awe­some per­for­mances. One of my favorite sequences inter­cuts between “The Maker” per­formed by Lanois’ band live in stu­dio, cov­ered by Willie Nel­son and Emmy­lou Har­ris, and Lanois’ band live on stage. Billy Bob Thorn­ton, still friends from col­lab­o­rat­ing on the score to Sling Blade in 1996, drops in for a visit. We catch excit­ing glimpses of record­ing U2’s forth­com­ing album (since chris­tened No Line on the Hori­zon, to be released in Feb­ru­ary 2009) with Eno and Steve Lillywhite.

Daniel Lanois in Here Is What IsWhich but­ton dials down Bono’s ego?

Lanois names a pri­mar­ily influ­ence to be the Jimi Hen­drix Expe­ri­ence, which he describes as a fairly straight­for­ward rock trio but with ambi­tious, exper­i­men­tal pro­duc­tion. He describes how he him­self approaches pro­duc­tion, in just one word: “feel.” He report­edly had a con­tentious rela­tion­ship with Dylan in the stu­dio, but the resul­tant albums are clas­sics, and Dylan affirmed that “you can’t buy ‘feel.’” Another Lanois apho­rism, “max­i­mize the room,” means to make the most of what you have, rather than invite guest musi­cians or order up more equipment.

Here Is What Is fea­tures full per­for­mances of songs, which is espe­cially wel­come com­pared to two recent music doc­u­men­taries recently screened by The Dork Report: Low in Europe (read The Dork Report review) and You May Need a Mur­derer (read The Dork Report review), which both shy away from actu­ally show­ing Low per­form. Here Is What Is’s visu­als are some­times com­pro­mised with cheesy video effects. The film is at its best when sim­ply fol­low­ing the hyp­notic move­ments of Lanois’ hands on his pedal steel guitar.


Offi­cial movie site: daniellanois.com/hereiswhatis

Buy the DVD from Ama­zon and kick back a few pen­nies to The Dork Report.

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