Part iv of vi relaying baker b.’s personal journey through the golden age of synching (1997-2003 or so). Parts i-iii are here…
https://bakerbloch.wordpress.com/category/carrcass-artists/
Our trip brings us now to Walt SIDney’s Fantasia 2000, which represents another step up for me at least in terms of producing an obviously synchy and quite watchable work. Like Pink Vertigo, this is an attempt to tile a complete or equivalent complete movie with audio. Unlike PV, devoted to Pink Floyd alone (albeit tracks from a number of their albums), WSF2K cracks open the barn door a bit more to allow artists like Nirvana, Stevie Wonder, Radiohead, Paul McCartney, and Electric Light Orchestra to enter and join in the fun, in addition to, yes, a pretty hefty dose of Floyd at the end.
I was pleased to find an old website on the subject last night, so perhaps I won’t have to yammer on as much about this one. Check it out here if you wish…
http://www.appstate.edu/~brittanma/oldersites/wsf2k.html
http://www.appstate.edu/~brittanma/oldersites/wsf2k1.html
Here are the lyrics for the various tracks…
http://www.appstate.edu/~brittanma/oldersites/wsf2klyrics.html
Some key ideas:
WSF2K evolved directly out of Shared Fantasia, the latter which I consider a pivotal work in the golden age of synching for certain. I was pretty shocked to find out I could create a virtual double or twin in so short a span (3 nights). 10 cues are involved, with the last cue spanning 2 animation segments and playing right over the gap where Angela Lansbury is introducing the last one. Interestingly, that final animation, dubbed by the Floyd song “Sorrow” (original music: Igor Stravinsky’s “Firebird Suite.”), may represent the best stretch of synchronicity in WSF2K and one of the best I’ve been able to produce in my own work. Yet since the cue of this tile comes in the animation before it (which also works quite well in and of itself), the section can be viewed as being further away from manipulation or *synchronization* than anything else in WSF2K; ironic juxtaposition, then. Synchronization and synchronicity become more mixed up here and hard to surfacely differentiate.
The weakness of WSF2K, and by association, Shared Fantasia, is the lack of an overall storyline, like we had in Pink Vertigo. The animation blocks in both Fantasia and Fantasia 2000 are separate from each other and do not weave together in any way except through commentary. We’ll deal with this issue more in the next part of my personal journey through the golden age of synching: “Rock Operas”. See you then!
password: synch
https://www.dropbox.com/sh/f7q60xyq2hptrmy/AADpis9nsx6KLPKrwsALedr8a?dl=0
WSF2K
Filed under Carrcass Artists