Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The Importance of Miles Davis. With the help of sound designers Trevor Mathison and Robin Fellows, Akomfrah's The Stuart Hall Project is an example of improvisation between the narrative device and jazz music, in this instance the music of Miles Davis.

  2. 11 de dic. de 2013 · Backed by the mellow sounds of Miles Davis, Akomfrah directs an intimate collage of archival footage, depicting Hall's personal and public life, the political context, and the groundbreaking theoretical work on race, culture and the new left that emerged from them.

  3. 1 de jun. de 2017 · “When I was nineteen, Miles Davis put his finger on my soul, and it never went away,” Stuart Hall reflects in John Akomfrah’s documentary, The Stuart Hall Project. Miles Davis not only “touched” Hall’s soul, but the music and its many moods, its vagaries, its experimentations provided a lodestar, a touchstone, and a balm ...

  4. 14 de feb. de 2014 · He was long a devotee of Miles Davis, the composer and performer who crystallized for Hall the beauty, psychic density and peril of Blackness, and who provided the soundtrack for Hall’s emerging black consciousness in Britain of the 1960s.

  5. 4 de feb. de 2019 · As he later commented, “Miles Davis had put his finger on my soul” (129). Seeking refuge from the oppressive routines of Anglo-Saxon translation, Hall was introduced by U.S. friends to American literature.

  6. Cultural critic and New Left fountainhead Stuart Hall meets the mood music of Miles Davis and the reflective screen poetry of John Akomfrah in this multifaceted documentary, writes Ashley Clark.

  7. 6 de sept. de 2013 · Stuart Hall: Mourning, migration and Miles Davis. Jonathan Derbyshire talks to filmmaker John Akomfrah about The Stuart Hall Project. By Jonathan Derbyshire. September 06, 2013. Cultural theorist Stuart Hall is the subject of a new documentary.