Sunday, September 14, 2008

Blog Post #3




Everybody's Free (To wear Sunscreen)

This is one of my favorite videos, the kind of thing I listen to when I'm feeling down or what have you. It's a video made for the song "Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)" by Baz Luhrmann. Luhrmann (and his associates) mixed it from Rozalla's song "Everybody's Free (To Feel Good)" , featured on the sound track for William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet (directed by Luhrmann), and a track of Austraillian voice actor Lee Perry. Perry is reading aloud the entirety of an essay written as a column in the June 1st 1997 edition of the Chicago Tribune. The essay was written by Mary Schmich (though it was falsely rumored to be Kurt Vonnegut's commencement speech to the MIT class of '97). The essay is entitled "Advice, like Youth, Probably Just Wasted on the Young".
That whole long first introductiona paragraph should give you a feel for just how hard it is to accurately define. It's a video of a song of an essay. As such, it needs to be judged (or perhaps more accurately interperated) on three different levels. First, it's worth as a video. The visual images don't convey any plot in themselves, but they aren't purely there to diagram the song either. Pretty scenes, happy faces, and snippets of daily life which are enhanced by the words and music as much as the the words and music are enhanced by the video. After that layer comes the audio, that is, the spoken words and the music. The music, not orginally inteded to support a spoken word essay has, much like the images, it's own life. That life however has (as Luhrman saw) the same emotional goals as the words, they work in concert. The spoken words are low and easy going this is not a command, this is not a warning, this is merely a collection of advice. After that we have the heart of the piece. The written word, written as a mock commencement speach, was originally meant only as part of your morning newspaper reading reutine. A collection of words written by some one moved enough to write.

I like this piece, and think it's important and powerful, because or it's creative synergy. It's at least three seperate voices working together for the same goal, adding without compromising. It hits three distinctive parts of our soul, and more literally, we simultaneusly intake and interperet it with three different parts of our brain.

If that's not cool, I don't know what is.

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