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Music for Black Pigeons Review: An Improvised Jazz Odyssey

Portraits of Artists at Work and Play

Naser Nahandian by Naser Nahandian
8 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Music, Reviews
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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Music for Black Pigeons journeys alongside renowned jazz musicians over fourteen years. Directors Jørgen Leth and Andreas Koefoed capture the musical collaborations of Danish composer Jakob Bro across this time. Their camera intimately observes recording sessions and live performances, as well as thought-provoking interviews. Through it all, a shared passion pulses—these artists’ dedication to constantly evolving their sound, even as they age.

The directors follow Bro as he works with legends like Lee Konitz and those still rising, like Thomas Morgan. Their encounters unfold in locations from New York to Greenland, united by melody. The film probes the intangibles of the creative process—what happens when talent joins. Interview highlights probe deeper, as some musicians articulately describe their art while others pause, searching inward to translate the ineffable.

This immersive documentary offers glimpses into artistic philosophies. It displays jazz not just as music but as an outlook, a constant discovery. At its soulful heart, though, are those moments when talking ends and playing begins, voices lifting in vibrant conversation that needs no translation.

Musical Masters and Meandering Moments

This documentary brings together a crew of truly stellar jazz musicians. Lee Konitz, a legendary saxophonist, featured prominently at 92 years old. Guitar greats Bill Frisell and Craig Taborn animated the recording sessions. Danish bassist Thomas Morgan and American drummer Mark Turner lend energetic talents. Trumpeter Palle Mikkelborg and pianists Jon Christensen and Paul Motian were also part of the group before their recent passing.

Meanwhile, Japanese percussionist Midori Takada flies a lone flag for women amongst the players. Their diverse backgrounds unite through boundary-pushing melodies. Across 14 years, the film follows these masters and more, joining Danish composer Jakob Bro. He serves as a core collaborator, with the camera capturing recording studio jam sessions and live shows spanning locales from New York to Greenland.

Directors Jorgen Leth and Andreas Koefoed afford their documentary a leisurely pace befitting its jazz-influenced spirit. Scenes unfold sans rigid chronology. We relax into the musicians’ flowing interactions as they explore fresh harmonies. Interludes offer glimpses of their everyday lives, whether washing clothes or teaching young pupils. Conversation replaces confrontation, intimacy over intensity.

This invites viewers to loosen up and lean into the film’s surprising twists and turns, much like the branching pathways taken by these creative spirits on their questing musical journeys.

Insights from the Artists

The film illuminates the musical process through in-depth interviews. Danish bassist Thomas Morgan admits avoiding practice, wary of “developing habits.” Yet in performance, “you lose yourself in meditation, focusing on restoring balance.”

Music for Black Pigeons Review

American saxophonist Mark Turner articulates his quest when asked: “I’m looking for home, for center…not sure what I seek, but always discovery.” The pause before his profound reflection hints at jazz’s deep well of expression.

Trumpeter Palle Mikkelborg sees music as a lifelong “search for life’s meaning.” Their craft prompts existential pondering. But not all can convey such intangibles in words.

When asked his experience, also hesitant is drummer Thomas Morgan. He smiles, conceding his inability to describe. But then shares jazz’s many facets: “meditation,” “problem-solving,” and focus amid flowing spontaneity.

The film astutely includes such pauses, where musicians wrestle their ineffable work into language. Their thoughtful answers reward such patience. Viewers glimpse artists’ journeying minds, ever evolving in response to melodies’ mysteries, as across this documentary’s reflective scenes.

Melodies that Spark Creativity

Jakob Bro’s tunes stimulate greats like Konitz, despite complexity beyond familiar fare. Threading adventurous paths yet embracing listeners, his pieces provoke improvised magic.

Music for Black Pigeons Review

During recording sessions, Bro’s melodies motivate fiery interplay. Cameras capture talents tumbling together yet respectfully, cautiously crafting new turns. Through collaboration, individuals discover unplanned progressions; moment-by-moment innovation sparkles.

Whether transporting to far-flung places or amid Greenland’s natural beauty, live shows exhibit utmost artistic rapport. Jam scenes epitomize jazz’s soul—ensembles embrace unpredictability with empathy, supportively exploring where ways may wind. Audiences witness living history and intimate bonds birthing beauty through balanced flux and flow.

Improvisation stretches limits yet retains beauty. Between written notes arise cascades of creativity, constantly challenging while cherishing tradition. Viewers glimpse masterful minds meshing, thoughtful improvisers navigating by intuitive feel. Bro’s notes light their way, fueling freshness within familiar forms.

Fascinating to witness giftedness guiding giftedness, melodies midwifing magic. Scenes share jazz’s heart: constant curiosity, individuals forging unified voices through vision, tessering talent into tapestries of sound.

A Wandering Way with Music

Directors Jørgen Leth and Andreas Koefoed chose a leisurely path, chronicling connections as they naturally grew over 14 years. Intentional yet easygoing, their vision invited intimacy over insistent storylining.

Music for Black Pigeons Review

Scenes follow an unhurried rhythm befitting improvised jazz. We relax alongside wandering tunes and talks, peeking into personal moments neither filmmakers nor players could predict. This discovery-led style mirrors music’s exploratory spirit.

Had they aimed for hagiography, the tightest tales would trumpet a single star. But luminaries like Konitz and Bro shine most when sharing their gift casually, sparks striking between varied voices. Allowing relationships to blossom at their own pace bred candor, connection, and creativity we’d miss in slickly edited reverie.

Viewers feel less removed observers than loose accomplices to an unplanned escapade. We join a journey where each turn could lead toward telos unknown, finding fulfillment through the fellowship itself. Like these artists, directors treasured open-eared living-in-the-moment over narrative’s finite reigns.

Their relaxed reign freed film as these talents freed their melodies, coursing wherever sweet serendipity may steer. Viewers glimpse the intimacy and individuality that birth creativity over a biography’s reductive shine.

Ever Evolving Elan

Passion pulses through these musicians, their love for music evident across decades. Centered on artistry yet celebrating friendship, the film taps into jazz’s soul—artful tradition bonding pioneers anew with each note.

Music for Black Pigeons Review

Director’s chronicle players’ bonds, tightening over years yet shifting as tastes develop. Connection persists despite time or parting; when Konitz’s light faded, others’ performances paid tribute. Constantly challenging each other and themselves, talents stay inspired through aging—experience refines but burns no less bright.

Music sustains, even post-curtain. We grieve legends now silent, but their spirit lingers in survivors’ keys and tones. Motian, Stanko, and others absent still play on, through comrades’ fresh collaborations resurrecting reverberations of the past.

So filming’s extended arc grants a poignant view of an evolving craft. But themes of fellowship, discovery, and rebirth lift sadness as careers ascend and conclude. These artists transform the fleeting into everlasting elegies, infusing tomorrow with echoes of yesterday. Their art survives all who give it breath.

Offbeat Odyssey’s End

This film takes us on a gently wandering journey, closer to the souls driving jazz evolution. Across decades, directors chronicled flowing encounters and quiet insights, inviting perspectives beyond performance—into what inspires creation, moment to moment.

Music for Black Pigeons Review

Music for Black Pigeons offers glimpses inside artists, ever thoughtfully pushing themselves anew. Willing viewers may find philosophy and feeling to linger with, seeds for personal growth. Though intimacy precludes mass markets, its reward lies less in renown than witnessing shared origins of melody—bonds birthing beauty in diversity and spirits undimmed by time.

The documentary brings luminaries’ gifts and gifts of their gathering down intimate years closer to our own shores. Its unhurried way mirrors music’s heart: live fully where circumstances lead, not where plans decree, and find fuel for tomorrow’s discoveries wherever wonder takes root. May this glimpse encourage explorations into jazz’s farther fields still ripe for harvest.

The Review

Music for Black Pigeons

8 Score

Music for Black Pigeons offers an intimate portait of jazz as a profound artistic endeavor and a vessel for fellowship. Through understated observation of creative giants at work and play over decades, the film cultivates appreciation for both the music and its legacy of sustained innovation. It provides a gently absorbing experience for open-minded viewers willing to embark on its offbeat odyssey.

PROS

  • Intimate look at the artistic process and philosophies of renowned jazz musicians
  • Shows the relationships and musical collaboration between artists over many years.
  • Features memorable performances and interviews from legends like Lee Konitz
  • Captures the musicians in informal, casual settings as well as recording sessions.
  • Conveys the constant discovery, challenge, and passion involved in their craft

CONS

  • Lacks a tightly structured narrative in favor of a more improvised, episodic style
  • Minimal inclusion of female artists given its focus on Jakob Bro's collaborators
  • Unfamiliarity with some lesser-known musicians may alienate less dedicated fans.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Andreas KoefoedAndrew CyrilleBill FrisellDocumentaryFeaturedJakob BroJoe LovanoJon ChristensenJørgen LethLee KonitzManfred EicherMusic for Black PigeonsMusicalPaul Motian
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