Posted on 04/30/2018 1:03:17 PM PDT by ethom
During this years Super Bowl, a trailer aired for the second season of Westworld. As you might expect, it featured some real Westworld-y stuff: vistas of the American West, enigmatic digital bulls, breathy narration that sounded like someone reading from Brave New World. But amid all the distinctive trappings of the show, there was something even more familiar, something that immediately took you out of the Westworld world and put you into a very different headspace: the first piano notes of Kanye Wests Runaway, which eventually led into an orchestral version of the song that was featured on the show Sunday night.
Watching the premiere of Runaway at the 2010 VMAs is to see Kanye at his best. Resplendent in blood red, enough gold around his neck to make a pharaoh blush, Kanye plays an MPC perched on a Roman plinth as he debuts one of his greatest songs, accompanied by a trio of ballerinas who foreshadow the short film that will later serve as a particularly grandiose music video for the track.
By that point, Kanye was well established as a controversial dude; the previous years VMAs had been the site of his infamous upstaging of Taylor Swift. But that performance in 2010 was also a reminder of whats so irresistible about Kanye: that, no matter how bizarre his behavior became or how far he seemed to stray from even the precedent hed set himself, he could, at any moment, deliver a piece of art so peerless and idiosyncratic that it would immediately overshadow his antics. Runaway was a particularly potent example of that notion, because it was a song about Kanye being Kanye: Representing the height of Kanyes unique brand of self-awareness. He knows you know that its essential to the creation of his art.
In the seven-plus years since Runaway, this dynamic of ridiculous controversy preceding musical triumph has been repeated more than once, and, what with Kanyes recent courting of Donald Trump and all the noise thats come with it, we seem to be at it again which is what makes the timing of this Westworld episode so fascinating. Obviously, the use of Runaway in the show is meant to be anachronistic, jarring, and disruptive in a way that symbolizes Westworlds own toying with authenticity and appearances. But it also suggests that, as is already the case for the trailer, it wont be effective in the way that it intends. As he so often does, Kanye has corrupted and hijacked the narrative, and in doing so hes inadvertently shined a light on the peculiarity of his music being used in trailers for big-budget action extravaganzas. In fact, its probably time to retire not just Runaway, but the entirety of Kanyes songbook from being used in this way.
Trailers for movies and television are a strange bastard of capitalism. On the one hand, they emerge from art, or, at the very least, entertainment; on the other, theyre advertising, designed to sell you a product. That this product just so happens to be art is a complicated thing, because it requires a certain dishonesty: when you watch a trailer, youre watching the most digestible and streamlined version of a film or TV show, one designed to lure you in. But what youre also seeing are the same techniques used to make film and TV appealing namely, editing and underscoring, which is essentially just sound editing put to the purposes of advertising.
Theres a reason that so many predominantly aesthetic or philosophical cinematic movements tend to sideline editing and underscoring in favor of long takes and diegetic sound: its because the more aggressively a film is edited visually and sonically, the less it resembles reality. While aggressive editing and underscoring are, of course, practiced toward artistic ends, they happen to play significant roles in the bulk of modern commercial cinema, which is more heavily and choppily edited than any movement in the history of film, and tends to feature overwhelming, bombastic soundtracks. Many trailers are heavily edited and underscored versions of movies that have already been edited and underscored to the edge of their lives, and this results in a product that is often compulsively watchable show me a person who hasnt accidentally spent an hour on trailers.apple.com, and Ill show you a saint but which can sometimes have a relationship to their source material analogous to the relationship between that source material and reality.
That this is being done in the interest of advertising just exacerbates the issue. Editing and underscoring are techniques based in emotional manipulation every edit, every note of music is an indication of where to look, how to look at it, how long to look at it for, and how to feel about it and so is advertising, which relies on triggering an emotional response in connection with the subject of that ad so that it will endure in your mind.
Kanye fits into this in an obvious way: his music is extremely effective, in the sense that it cant help but cut through the noise and capture your attention. The notion of Kanyes music being kept in the background is as antithetical to its nature as would be playing it at a wedding or funeral; this is not music that can be relegated to the service of ritual or tradition. Kanyes mind is one that renders his influences and interests into a substance that defies and distorts them as much as it pays homage or builds upon its foundations. There are many legitimate arguments to be had over the lyrical content of Yeezus, but its hard to suggest that the compositions on that album arent bracingly, almost disturbingly, distinguished in their originality and power. When you look at the carousel of movies that have used Kanyes songs in their trailers, you see that effectiveness co-opted for the purpose of lending these movies and their images a memorability and appeal that, at best, enhances the films inherent quality see The Wolf of Wall Street or makes up for its absence (take your pick). It doesnt matter if the song isnt in the movie itself, or has nothing to do with the movie itself, because trailers arent about the movie theyre about making you want to see the movie.
You run into a similar issue when you consider how Westworld uses music; by stripping songs of their characteristic instrumentation and genre and then processing them through the same flattening prism quivering strings, rolling drums, and especially that drunken bar-room piano the show turns music from a vehicle for personal expression into another signifier of the idea that something just isnt right here. Its a stylistic nod toward the frisson of dissonance that provides one of Westworlds main aesthetics, but when the song being used defies that kind of neat deculturalization, it hits a stumbling block.
Kanyes music is evocative, but it doesnt just evoke the swagger or pathos or beauty that the trailers intend it to invoke in you. Kanyes music also invokes Kanye. Few modern artists songs are so fundamentally inseparable from their unique persona, perspective, and blend of influences; few statements feel safer than saying that no one couldve made My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, Yeezus, or The Life of Pablo who isnt named Kanye West. Other songs can be stripped from their original artists and covered by bands that sound nothing like them in order to make you feel EXCITED or AFRAID or NOSTALGIC but hearing a Kanye song just makes you think about that song, or Kanye, or the way you feel about Kanye, or the way that song made you feel when you first heard it.
Chances are, Kanye is more interesting than your movie or TV show. You invoke him at your own peril, and by doing so, you risk shattering the spell that a trailer is designed to cast. Sure, Runaway is great, but hearing it doesnt make me want to watch Westworld it makes me want to listen to Runaway.
This article is nothing but word salad to me.
And boom goes the dynamite
Liberals LOVE book burning and censorship.
We need to return them the favor.
Now that the Cos is done, and since the impotence of their War on Trump, Big Media can focus on destroying Kanye West and family.
“This article is nothing but word salad to me.”
Like this paragraph?
“Many trailers are heavily edited and underscored versions of movies that have already been edited and underscored to the edge of their lives, and this results in a product that is often compulsively watchable show me a person who hasnt accidentally spent an hour on trailers.apple.com, and Ill show you a saint but which can sometimes have a relationship to their source material analogous to the relationship between that source material and reality. “
I’m waiting for #MeToo to pounce...
E.g., Dylan:
"Blowin' in the Wind" -- Peter Paul and Mary's better
"Mr. Tambourine Man" -- Byrds' better
"All Along the Watchtower" -- Hendrix's better.
I’ve wondered how involved AI is in modern editing and “journalism”, and to an extent in FREE Kindle books, where I’ve often found gibberish like this.
Yes.
Yay, Im a saint! Movie trailers are reason enough not to go to the cine, and Im not spending an hour at whatever website he talked about.
“With God on Our Side” - The Neville Brothers
bookmark
I love this...
Now he can see and tell everyone how hateful the liberals are- and he can see what WE’VE had to deal with for years.
And I can’t see him apologizing.
It sounds to me like Kevin T. Lincoln doesn’t like it when his negroes act uppity and get ideas of their own. Massa Lincoln wants to give Kanye twenty lashes and take away his livelihood.
I thought “Blacklisting” was a bad thing?
Does this mean old Joe McCarty was right to demand Hollywood to name names?
That’s completely unreadable pointless filler.
“many trailers are edited and are unrelated to their source material”
What is this guy getting paid by the word?!
“Many trailers are heavily edited and underscored versions of movies that have already been edited and underscored to the edge of their lives, and this results in a product that is often compulsively watchable show me a person who hasnt accidentally spent an hour on trailers.apple.com, and Ill show you a saint but which can sometimes have a relationship to their source material analogous to the relationship between that source material and reality.”
Trailers are movie previews / advertisements. They generally show short clips (video sequences) from the movie (i.e. source material). He is saying that these movie trailers have a life of their own because they are entertaining all by themselves.
“Heavily edited” is a comment about film as an art. There is a language to film which is not how we experience real life. Film compresses and expands time. It cuts out all of the uninteresting aspects of the lives / stories being depicted.
“Underscored” is an unconventional (outside of the film world) reference which the average person understands to mean “supported”. In film jargon he is referring to musical scoring. Underscoring is when music is added to a scene that contains dialogue and generally is used to cue the audience to pay special attention to what is said in it because it is important.
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