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Jazz the Blues Away with “Begone Dull Care”

I said go away, blues!

Begone Dull Care (1949) dir. Norman McLaren & Evelyn Lambart

Could this be the most “pure” example of cinema? McLaren and Lambart painted, sprinkled, stenciled, and collaged this short directly onto strips of film giving it a lively hands-on quality, even more than usual in an era where all animation was directly “hands-on” by necessity. This project comes almost a decade after Disney’s merging of animation and sound in Fantasia, though a half-century before that series incorporated jazz. The score is by renowned composer and performer Oscar Peterson, once called “the maharaja of the keyboard” by Duke Ellington.

Peterson and McLaren worked out the music and images in tandem before animation began and McLaren and Lambart came up with ways to visualize the final recording (like an oscilloscope) to give them cues when animating. You can really feel the interplay between the audio and visual, each informing the other to the point where it doesn’t feel like the audio is leading the picture so much as they’re playing with each other. For some sections the animators painted on or scratched the film in real time as it spooled past in front of them and allowing them to improvise, a common tool in jazz usually denied an animator.

This is one of many projects made via the National Film Board of Canada, and the link points to their YouTube channel where you can find many other wonderful works they commissioned over the years. They also had a hand in developing technical innovations that led to “direct cinema” and docudrama, and they more or less founded the IMAX film format. It’s possible for a government to have a positive hand in developing the arts when innovative human beings are hired and retained and grants and research are properly funded. Just throwing that out there.

Beyond that, it’s an experiential thing, tough to talk about it when it’s made to wash over you and transfer the joy and energy from the artists’ fingertips to your eyes and ears.