Metro Australia – July 2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
BOTHTHEACTOFTURNINGTHELENSONA SUBJECTANDTHEACTOFENGAG-
INGWITHTHEENDPRODUCTINVOLVE,TOSOMEDEGREE,THEINSERTIONOF
ONESELFINTOTHEWORK;NOWHEREIS THISMOREFELTTHANINTHEMUSIC
DOCUMENTARY,A FORMTHATIS ATONCEA CHRONICLE,A CRITICALTOOL,
A SYMBOLOF COMMUNITYAND A CAPSULEOF FANDOM.ANTHONYCAREW
EXAMINESHOWTHESEELEMENTSMANIFESTIN THE RECENT FILMS BY TOBIAS
WILLIS AND CLAUDIA SANGIORGI DALIMORE.

Music, Self and Objectivityin


Now Sound: Melbourne’s Listening


and Her Sound, Her Story


Aural

Reflections

ThreeminutesintoNowSound:Melbourne’sListening
(TobiasWillis,2018),I sawmyselfonscreen.I didn’t
knowit wascoming,butthereI was:in a crowdcut­
awayattheNorthcoteSocialClub,watchingelectro
conceptualistSuiZhenperform.I expectedthedocu­
mentarytobefullof peopleI knew– friends;foes;fellow
broadcastersonMelbourne’siconiccommunity­radio
station3RRR,whereI’vepresenteda program,The
InternationalPopUnderground, for(ohgod)twodec­
ades.And,indeed,it was.ButI didn’tknowthat,forthe
first time ever as a critic, I’d seemyselfin a movie, and
havetocriticallyparsewhatthatmeant.
My unofficial,ephemeralon-screenpresenceinevi­
tablychangedwhatthisresultingessayis – something
evidentfromallthe‘I’sI’vealreadyused.Havingnever
wantedtoparticipatein contemporarypublishing’s
first-personindustrialcomplex,^1 I originallyconceived
ofthispieceasonecriticallyexaminingNowSound:
Melbourne’sListeningandanotherdocumentarychroni­
clingthelocalmusiccommunity,HerSound,HerStory
(Claudia Sangiorgi Dalimore, 2018); the idea certainly

didn’tinvolvebringingme,aswriter,intotheanalysis.
But comingface-to-facewith myselfwas some kind of
La Jetée(ChrisMarker,1962)moment,instantly altering
thenarrativethatexistedbeforehand.
Mypresencesuggestedbothmyownproximityto
theworldbeingdepictedanda greaterthemeboth
documentariesaregrapplingwith:criticalobjectivity.
Truecriticalobjectivityis a myth;personalexperience,
prejudice,taste and knowledgecolourany opinion,reac­
tion or readingof an artwork(iconicfilm critic Pauline
Kaelcalledit ‘sapheadobjectivity’,seeingattempts
todepersonalisewritingasthescourgeofpassion­
atereactionandlivelydiscussion^2 ). Beyondobjectiv­
ity, or the lack thereof,writingaboutfilms and writing
aboutmusic– whichI’vealsodonefor(ohgod)two
decades– feeldistinctlydifferent.Whilethere’sa long,
respectedhistoryofcinemacriticism,musiccriticism
is oftenmaligned;there’sthattiredoldquote,variously
attributedtoFrankZappaorElvisCostello(andbe­
yond),that‘writingaboutmusicis likedancingabout
architecture’.^3 The role of a music critic is rarely to parse

CRITICAL VIEWS

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