@ Sunny's Time Now



24,90 €

SUNNY'S TIME NOW
a portrait of jazz drummer and composer Sunny Murray

 

with
T
ony Bevan, Daniel Caux, Delfeil de Ton, Bobby Few, Ekkehard Jost, Grachan Moncur III, Fritz Novotny, Edwin Pouncey, Tony Herrington, William Parker, Sonny Simmons, Cecil Taylor, François Tusques, Val Wilmer, Robert Wyatt, a.o.

directed by
Antoine Prum


director of photography
Camille Cottagnoud
Carlo Thiel


sound

Gilles Laurent
Alex Davidson

producer
Paul Thiltges
David Grumbach


coproducer
Stéphane Bubel (La Bascule, France)
MEZZO

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documentary, 108 minutes, colour, HD,/35mm Dolby SRD > original version: english & french subtitles: GER, ENG, FRE

DVD1 - the film

The documentary feature Sunny’s time now retraces the longstanding career of avant-garde drummer Sunny Murray, one of the most influential figures of the Free jazz revolution. Through a series of interviews with key time witnesses as well as historic and contemporary concert footage, it reassesses the relationship between the libertarian music movement and the political events of the 1960s, whose social claims it so intimately reflected. By doing so, it also recounts how the most radical forms of musical expression were excluded from the major production and distribution networks as the libertarian ideal went out of fashion.

Beyond its historical approach, the film follows Sunny Murray on current gigs, showing his daily struggle to perpetuate a musical genre which is still widely ignored by the general public. In doing so, Sunny’s time now also dwells on the near-clandestine community of aficionados who continue to worship the gods of their musical coming of age, and whose unfaltering support has permitted free improvisational music – of which Sunny Murray is one of the last Mohicans – to live on.

 

 

 

Bang!
Let’s go on. Like Louis Pasteur.
They ain’t fucked with the milk since then,
except maybe diluted it a little bit.
– Sunny Murray
 

Article from Paris Transatlantic Magazine by Dan WARBURION
http://www.paristransatlantic.com/magazine/monthly2009/12dec_text.html#6





Article from The Wire Magazine
http://www.thewire.co.uk/articles/3466/

 

 

release in: december 2008