Preparations For A Journey (VHS)
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Label info: Victor VTM55, 1985 Date: February 1, 1985 Type: VHS | |
Released in Japan only | |
Hard to get rarity. Original music by David Sylvian. Performed by Ryuichi Sakamoto, Steve Jansen, Masami Tsuchiya.
This version has a vertical inlay.
Credits: Video dir. Yasuyuki Yamaguchi and David Sylvian. Produced by Mick Tachikawa and Tadahiko Nobe. Cover design and photography by Yuka Fujii.
Spoken text:
Over the past three years I've seen major
changes in myself, and I now feel about ready to commit myself to
certain basic philosophiea that may see me through my entire life.
The
first couple of times I went to Kyoto, there was, -I didn't feel
anything particularly special about it. People had told me that it was a
place I should visit, and that there was a special feeling here, or a
special atmosphere, but I was never really aware of it. It wasn't until I
got really tired of Tokyo, and I, I sort of escaped from Tokyo to Kyoto
for a break, that I experienced it in the
way that people had said I ought to experience it.
Probably
because of my age, and mainly because of being brought up in a city,
the countryside never really appealed to me, and everything, -I took it
for granted, very much so, and everything seemed to appear more like
postcard views. I never really felt, I never felt anything from nature.
I
could see it, and it's like the way people say they enjoy a painting,
but they don't feel anything from the paintings, I think maybe it was,
maybe it was through my drawing I began to have a greater appreciation
of other people's work, and I begin, I began to feel things from
paintings, from drawings or whatever, which is somethi ng that also,
that never happened before, maybe that opened up the senses to allow me
to feel something from nature.
Music takes up more of my time, I
mean, just thinking about the work that I have done, or that I will do,
and I think that would take up far much more of my time than, than my
thoughts and actual work on the drawings and on the Polaroids, but they,
they allow me a break from, from the writing, and by turning to the
Polaroids, which is a very physical thing, I think, because it's a
manual thing, a manual job if you like, it tends to relax me, and allows
me to turn back to the writing with a sort of more open mind.
I
think it's dangerous to do too many things at once, it's, I think it's
really bad to concentrate on two or three things at the same time. I
think that you. then spread yourself too thin, and do neither one of
them we" enough, so I think that with the drawing and the Polaroids and
the writing, it's enough for me to be working on at the moment. But in
the future, I would like to write and direct a short film. I've always
been interested in images, and I'd like to do a film that allowed me to
express myself totally through visual images.
You feel an
affinity with the person that took the photograph, that pai nted the
painting, composed the music or whatever. You feel you have something in
common in some way because you're feeling something from it. It's when
you feel something that, to go further, it's the essence of the artist
that's in the picture, the spirit, the spirit that the artist
communicates for is there within the music, within the photograph,
within the painting, and that's what makes a piece of work valuable.
You
have to prepare for work. You don't have to prepare for it actually
planning it, but, but you have to rest, put your mind into, into the
right state to think about working. So there is a sort of preparing of
atmosphere, if you like, a building up of energy in a way, mental
energy. I always spend a long period of time at home reading or just
doing minor things, before actually trying to work.
The time I
first started taking Polaroids, I moved into an apartment facing a
church, which provided me with a perfect subject for my work.
I've
taken many pictures of well¬known architecture and landscapes in the
hope of showing them in an alternative, or rather, clearer perspective
than seen previously.
I've used myself as the subject in many
pictures, but tried to confine the use of self-portraiture to areas of
experimentation on only.
I came across the idea of using pastels
when I found the final pictures incomplete in themselves, but I've since
found the combination of photographs and artwork, well, really the most
exciting of discoveries.
In more recent pictures, I've been
putting to use the techniques I've been learni ng over the past three
years, trying to create pictures of a more lasting quality.
Video
Video
Tracklist
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