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SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL
WEBSITE
www.sundancechannel.com/festival98
With Modulations, her second film in three years in
competition at Sundance, Iara Lee is quickly becoming the
authoritative cinematic voice for a subculture whose nucleus
is electronic music. Created by computer artists who
manipulate sampled sounds with synthesizers, and performed
on turntables at after hours "raves" and parties by disk
jockeys, electronic music is as much a state of being as it
is entertainment. Modulations intersperses artful imagery
with talking-head interviews and party and club footage to
examine the historical development of electronic music and
explore the philosophy of its young audience. The film, like
the music, is multilayered in ways that go much deeper than
what can be casually observed. Lee captures the sort of
visceral images only available to an insider. Originally
conceived as underground gathering places, an increasing
number of raves are now organized by commercially driven
entrepreneurs. Lee traces the tribal roots of such styles as
"house," "acid," "ambient," "Detroit," and "German drum and
bass." Further, she examines the influence of artists like
Kraftwerk and Afrika Bambaataa on the music, and assesses
the impact of John Cage, whose early work, with its use of
mechanical and background noise, seeded the creation of
today's electronic music. Using interviews with the scene's
most respected and influential players and clips from
performances in the key hubs of the United States, Germany,
Japan and Great Britain, Lee conveys the expansive reach of
this constantly morphing art form. Her expertly conceived
and executed film is sure to be a staple in the collection
of the electronic music movement's growing legion of
worshippers.
-Trevor Groth
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