Who knew Lotus could fly?

Steven Ellison, better known by his stage name Flying Lotus or Flylo is a American born record producer, beatmaker, DJ, and filmmaker hailing from Los Angeles California. His music is often referred to as “post Dilla”, “post-hip hop”, “post avant-garde jazz”, beat music. However, this is only one interpretation of what a listener may experience when listening to any of Flylo’s four studio albums. The grand nephew of  the late jazz pianist Alice Coltrane and John Coltrane it’s no wonder Flylo’s music seems to transcend the musical boundaries normal listeners impose upon organized musical sonorities. The only thing that can be definitively said of Flying Lotus’s music is that it creates a experience for the listener unlike anything of its time. In the words of the man himself “when it comes to film and art and music I loves things….that take me somewhere else I’ve never seen”.  

Without a doubt Flying Lotus music creates an oral experience that blends jazz, hip hop, electronics, sound effects, dub, rock, soul, and whatever else into a pseudo psychedelic oral journey. But hearing is not the only way in which audiences can experience Flying Lotus’s imaginative depiction of the world we live in. Drawing inspiration from cinematic icons such as Stanley Kubrick and Shinya Tsukamoto, Flying Lotus has distributed a total of 12 music videos, directed several screenplays, and works closely with visual artists to create visual landscapes for his live performances. Flylo’s music video for his song Zodiac Shit off his fourth studio album Cosmogramma is especially striking visually. The video concept is very easy to make sense of as it simply depicts images of each of the Chinese Zodiac signs in order from 1 to 12 and then backwards from 12 to 1.  The cat at the end of the video is staring eerily at the screen because they got left out of the Chinese Zodiac according to the legend as to how the animals were picked. The song itself begins with a string drone underneath a soothing chime like synth sound that seems to float on  top of the entire track. About thirteen seconds in a drum like patch begins to build momentum along with some type of low frequency filtered drone which builds to a massive *thud* signalling the beat drop. The listener is then immersed in a groovy glitch pop electronic soundscape of bass and drums with other light sound effects coloring intermittently. Almost like a Warner Brothers Cartoon of Bugs Bunny. The groove seems to be very momentary as it fades back into the initial string drone and chimes from the intro about fifty seconds in.

The album version of  is about two minutes and forty five seconds however the music video only covers the first minute thirty two seconds. This is probably because the last minute and 3 seconds of the song act as a transition into the next song ‘Computer Face// Pure Being’ off the album. The last minute and 3 seconds of Zodiac Shit can be described as a electronic groove based outro accompanied by a light string section, acoustic bass, and rhythmic computeresque sounds on top. Although somewhat similar to the first minute and 32 seconds of the song in terms of instrumentation it very much feels like a separate musical idea altogether worthy of its own title. This is very much apart of Flying Lotus’s unique creation process. Often listening to his albums its difficult to tell where a song ends and starts. In my personal listening of the album I see the whole album as one musical journey from start to end. I rarely find myself listening to a single song of Flylo’s rather than the whole album, unless there’s an awesome weird psychedelic video accompanying it!

A Rare Appearance of Coltrane On Video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ePScRElDHOY

This video of John Coltrane playing, “On Green Dolphin Street,” is less of a music video and more of a music documentary.  What it lacks in production value is made up for in historical value. There are no expensive props or dazzling visual animations— just four musicians playing a simple 32-bar form, show tune. Because the context of their performance is so spontaneous and evidently casual (because the leader missed the session), each musicians talent is showcased brilliantly and without distraction.

The quartet’s first musical decision is to start the tune off with a rubato piano intro featuring one complete statement of the melody.  Paul Chambers accompanies him with the bow which sets up a nice contrast for the pizzicato petal-point figure he plays when Jimmy Cobb brings the time in.  The staging and camera work reflects the musical decisions made by the quartet perfectly. The video opens with an overhead shot of Wynton Kelly’s hands on the piano.  They pull the camera back to reveal Paul Chambers, then Jimmy Cobb, and finally John Coltrane, but just his silhouette. Once Coltrane brings in the melody, the lighting shifts and the horn player has the spotlight.  

During the saxophone solo, we have some subtle camera movement to add liveliness and motion to the shot.  A wavelike animation also appears right by the bell of Coltrane’s saxophone. The first time I watched this video, I was mystified by the animation that fades in around 2:18 until I read mobuisII’s comment which points out that the animation was generated using an oscilloscope.  The waves are entertaining and they offer some variation to an otherwise static shot, but they don’t do much for me. I find myself not paying too much attention to them while they are visible and I certainly don’t miss the when they fade out.

While the decision to include the oscilloscope animation was questionable on the videographer’s part, all the decisions they made with the lighting were excellent.  Jakob Kurup says in the comment section that the, “musicians almost look divine.” The image of these legendary musicians playing against a solid black background is quite powerful.  The spotlight illuminates each one of them when they take a solo casting dramatic shadows over their concentrated expressions. Sometimes it even appears as though the musicians are glowing when the camera goes slightly in and out of focus temporarily blurring the picture.

The first two cuts in the video happen at the end of the saxophone solo into the piano solo. We see Coltrane’s profile for the entirety of his solo and towards the end a three quarter shot gets overlayed with the profile shot.  The profile shot quickly fades out and the viewer gets to watch Coltrane finish his solo from the three quarter angle. The next transition is a slower one which shows the back of Wynton Kelly sitting at the piano. All of the video editing described previously happens in about 15 seconds and is done very smoothly.  The video is certainly deserving of Chris Lawrence’s praise, “So incredibly polished and professional. Like something out of a movie. Breathtaking stuff.”

The “no-frills” vibe of this video combined with the greatest playing the history of jazz has to offer makes this production something that belongs in an archive.  Watching this video as a musician is a truly educational, and equally inspiring, experience because we get to understand how Coltrane and his contemporaries carried themselves on stage through visual means.  We’re not left guessing how Wynton Kelly’s hands looked on the piano, or how Paul Chambers held his bow all thanks to the skilled recording engineers at work that day.