Sunday 15 August 2021, 7.30pm

Photo by K. O. Beckman

Film screening: Just For the Record: Conversations with and about “Blue” Gene Tyranny

No Longer Available

Just For the Record: Conversations with and about “Blue” Gene Tyranny
(Dir. David Bernabo, 2020, 102 minutes)

“Blue” Gene Tyranny is a musician’s musician, someone who makes everyone around them sound better. As music writer Nicole Gagne explains in Just For the Record: Conversations with and about “Blue” Gene Tyranny, the first feature film to survey Tyranny’s work, “because he’s been very good at helping people sound their best--from Robert Ashley and Laurie Anderson, Carla Bley, Iggy Pop--it can make it hard for [his] own personality to be sufficiently distinct.”

But Tyranny is also a composer; a creator of systems for composing and frameworks for improvised music; someone who composed graphic scores and tape pieces in the days of the ONCE Group, 70s pop run through contemporary music processes at Mills College in the 70s, and audio storyboards and song cycles in New York in the 80s and 90s; a pianist; an improviser of great depth and nuance and virtuosic skill.

Just For the Record locates San Antonio, Ann Arbor, Oakland, and New York City as locations where Tyranny’s compositions and collaborations developed. Filmmaker David Bernabo takes a deep dive on the recently reissued Out of the Blue and the long lost Trust In Rock concert, on the long-gestating audio storyboard The Driver’s Son, and Robert Ashley’s Perfect Lives. Interwoven with discussions on Tyranny’s music is a conversation about the nature of reissues and how distribution is survival for many aging musicians.

Throughout the documentary, Bay Area filmmaker K. O. Beckman’s films with Tyranny, dating back to the 70s, provide rarely-seen performances and video projects.

The film features conversations with Tyranny, composer / musicians Joan La Barbara, Peter Gordon, Kyle Gann, David Grubbs, Philip Perkins, Jeff Berman, and Bill Ruyle, writer Nicole Gagne, artist Pat Oleszko, and Unseen Worlds owner Tommy McCutchon.