Monday, May 30, 2011

important & rare DOCUMENTARY: The LAST ANGEL of HISTORY ~afroFUTURISM cosmic ICONS

THE LAST ANGEL OF HISTORY



John Akomfrah’s documentary, Last Angel of History, opens with the story of Robert Johnson, who sold his soul to the devil in exchange for the blues. Akomfrah uses this story to set up music and black culture as a “black technology.” This makes music the center of a relm of science fiction which embraces and celebrates black technology and history. The film then goes on to discuss the three major black sci-fi musicians, Sun Ra in jazz, Lee Scratch Perry in Reggae, and George Clinton in funk. The film uses George Clinton’s Mothership Connection as an important part of the Data Theif story line, saying that the phrase “Mothership Connection” is a key to a code that will reveal the future, and that the rest of the code is scattered throughout black history and music.



SUN RA in JAZZ




Kodwo Eshun also talks about these musicians in his essay Further Considerations on Afrofuturism. He says that “Afrofuturism studies the appeals that black artists, musicians, critics, and writers have made to the future, in moments where any future was made difficult for them to imagine.” It is these moments that the Data Thief is trying to find and use to unlock the secrets of the future.




Scratch Perry in Reggae



In Last Angel of History, Eshun is interviewed and he claims that alien abduction has already taken place, in the form of slavery. This certainly sets up the argument that Octavia Butler’s novel Dawn is a neo-slave narrative, with the Oankali taking the place of white slave traders. In fact, in Dawn the biological exchange is referred to as trade, and the Oankali consider themselves traders. The character of Lilith is a science fiction look at a very traditional character- she is a black woman who starts out free but ends as a resentful black mistress, and the mother of mulatto children.




George Clinton’s Mothership Connection


The Data thief is a gatherer of information. His job in assembling the code is to make a composite of all black history. The film Scratch presented DJs in a similar way- Scratch music is a composite of all music history, shaped and presented through the artistic interpretations of the DJ. In Last Angel of History Greg Tate says that “sampling allows musicians to concentrate all eras of black music onto a chip.” There is also a discussion of “jungle” music, which uses technology to mimic the sounds of traditional drums and rhythms. The film points out that by using technology these musicians not on compile the past, they also embrace a cyborg identity- which becomes an allegory for blacks who need to prove their own humanity because of their color.


text
http://afrofuturisms.blogspot.com/20...f-history.html


first 7 minutes...


LET ME ADD:

THE LAST ANGEL OF HISTORY is a documentary about Pan-African culture and its relationship to science fiction, intergalactic travel and computer technology. Among those interviewed in the movie are musicians George Clinton, DJ Spooky, Goldie and Derek May, and science fiction writers Samuel R. Delaney and Octavia Butler


The Last Angel of History (1996) (rare documentary)...
140.99 MB

ONE LINK:


http://www.megaupload.com/?d=IM91JB5H





















one more article on the DOCUMENTARY:


The Last Angel of History.
Afterimage - Nov-Dec, 1997


Evoking Walter Benjamin's famous image of history as an angel who is at once looking backward at the past as she is flying forward toward the future, John Akomfrah's latest film essay is a similarly non-linear flight through a history of science fiction art and its relation to the Pan-African experience. As Akomfrah himself has said: these issues are not simply related, "the Black experience is science fiction!"

The Last Angel of History (1996) looks at tropes of the science fiction genre with its images of spaceships, time travel and high-tech futurism as they appear in Pan-African culture. In his film, Akomfrah claims science fiction as an integral part of some of the most innovative elements of African Diasporic culture. He sees sci-fi as the expression of a metaphor for both "otherness" in relation to the white world, and certain discourses of black cultural liberation. These are large claims, but they are made uniquely if not quite convincingly in the film.

The Last Angel of History is produced by Akomfrah as part of the London-based Black Audio Film Collective, one of the seminal black media groups to emerge out of the British media workshop movement of the 1980s. Since 1983 they have produced a series of innovative film essays including Handsworth Songs (1986) and Seven Songs for Malcolm X (1993), each providing a unique exploration of the politics of representation and questioning national identity within the African Diaspora.

Working across the history of black music, literature and contemporary post-colonial and post-humanist cultural theory, the film connects ancient African folklore and current "afro-futurism" in black avant-garde and popular cultures to create what Akomfrah calls a "digitized race memory." My own understanding of the "digital" in relation to "race memory" comes from digital hyper-media models that emphasize intertextuality through the interactive, nonlinear linking of and navigating through, disparate moments in time, geographical sites, texts, images and people. It is from working across such disparate elements that one can begin to define what might constitute a digital narrative of black history.

The Last Angel of History begins with the figure of early twentieth-century itinerant bluesman Robert Johnson, who, as legend has it, made a pact with the Devil so that he might become the world's greatest bluesman. This otherworldly connection explains for many the power and innovation of his music. Johnson becomes part of a lineage of innovative artists including futurist composers Sun Ra and George Clinton. Sun Ra claims to be from another galaxy and with his big band, the Arkestra, weave together sonic images of space-time travel and exploration with early Egyptian mythology. This kind of "future-past" evocation is also a metaphor for his unique musical hybrid of traditional Jazz and avant-garde forms of African American and European music. Clinton, an inventor of electronic funk music, also fosters a persona of an extraterrestrial: he arrives in his Mothership to expose the human race to the cosmic mind/body expanding music of Funkadelic. Like Sun Ra in Jazz, Clinton uses intergalactic travel as a metaphor for a kind of hybrid exploration of popular music forms from R & B, to psychedelic rock, to purely electronic music. This lineage is placed in relation to contemporary popular forms such as Techno, Dub, Jungle and Rap music and their pre-occupation with high technology as a way to create new sounds never heard before.

In the film's non-linear fashion, we see an array of archival photographs and film footage of these artists in performance along with interviews with Clinton and various contemporary musicians and critics including Greg Tate, Lee Perry and DJ-Spooky. This history is intercut with images of early Egyptian culture and African folklore about man's relation to the cosmos. The interviewees speak of the interconnectedness of certain African traditions of astronomy and sun/sky worship and the contemporary spaceship image. They see this current image as a metaphor for notions of liberation through creative exploration and experimentation. Perhaps the most moving interview in the piece is with one of the first astronauts of African descent to travel in space. He speaks about taking the flags of Africa with him, to connect the ancient tradition of African astronomy to current space travel. He also speaks of how science fiction genres sparked his interest in space travel, citing the character of Lt. Uhura in the TV show Star Trek as a pivotal image. Woven into these images and interviews is a character called the Data Thief, who, from 200 years in the future, uses the "information superhighway" to explore the past, present and future of the black diaspora. We find him at different moments of the film hacking at a PC station or gazing out over post-apocalyptic American landscapes. While he muses over African history we see images of African paintings, sculpture and community and religious ritual. At other moments he is inside the computer as if the lines between the human body and the digital body have become indistinct.

This relationship between the human body and the cyborg body are commented upon by black science fiction writers Octavia Butler and Samuel R. Delany. Through interviews, their notion of the black experience as science fiction is explicated in relation to a history of cultural and physical dislocation of the African Diaspora. Butler and Delany speak of how the relocation of populations to previously unknown parts of the world leads to sci-fi metaphors such as the "New World" as "Other World." They also comment on the relation between post-apocalyptic imagery and current post-colonial notions of "mutant" social and cultural hybrids that can no longer claim to be purely European or African.

The final and perhaps most challenging issue that The Last Angel of History raises is the relationship between current theoretical writing on the "cyborg" and the black experience. With the rise of mechanical replacements and extensions of the human body through robotics, genetic cloning, artificial intelligence and prosthetics, the question of what exactly is a human being becomes an issue. While questions such as this may result from technological developments, The Last Angel of History convincingly implies that the relationship of the African Diaspora to the white world is an age old issue. (Was the slave a man or a machine that was "man-like"? Was it this man/machine dichotomy that allowed humanistic and enlightenment notions of Law to not apply to the black man/woman?) Issues concerning legal rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, the right to vote, education and the rights of a national subject have all been subjected to racist debate as it applies to the African, ultimately questioning black human-ness. As these questions are raised in relation to new technologies, the black experience is placed at the forefront of current ethical questions in interesting and contradictory ways.

Formally, Akomfrah's film is closer to Ornette Coleman's entropic concept of "Harmolodics" - where multiple melodic and harmonic themes become interchangeable and are voiced simultaneously - than the steady backbeat of Clinton's Funkadelic. The Last Angel of History's visual style has an affinity with channel or Web surfing in its melange of interview, archival footage, photographs, dance, musical performance, religious ritual, painting and animation, as well as dramatic sequences using hi-tech special effects. This form also can be seen in relation to the rock video in terms of its frantic fast cutting, heavy reliance on hi-end production values, use of digital image processing and non-stop musical backbeat. For Akomfrah this is not empty pyrotechnics, rather, he is using this form to show the inter-connectedness of many different ideas represented from the point of view of different periods in history and cultural discourses. Akomfrah has deliberately constructed this film as a fragmented series of ideas, images and sounds that are temporally non-linear and incomplete in order to convey a sense of ideas as pure velocity and as a unique and problematic environment that the digitized information age presents to us. By necessity he wants to blur the lines of the traditional cinematic genres of dramatic, documentary and journalism. The work contains fragments of each genre, signifying different modes of making meaning while undermining them at the same time. What Akomfrah is trying to show is that cinematic form is also in question, and that to create new formal cinematic structures is also in keeping with the futuristic traditions of African culture and art making.

Clearly, 45-minutes is hardly enough time to address, in their full detail or complexity, such a wide range of issues. Perhaps this is where the film opens itself for the most criticism. While this criticism may be vapid, the playfulness and intellectual virtuosity of the film transcends its surface gloss, to become a kaleidoscopic celebration of the richness of Pan-African culture.

JEFFREY SKOLLER is a filmmaker who writes frequently on contemporary media and is currently teaching at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

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