Categories
Silent Film & Comics

The Adventures of Prince Achmed

The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926) is a silent silhouette animation by Lotte Reiniger, considered by many to be the first feature-length animated film. Influenced by Georges Méliès (Voyage dans la lune) and Paul Wegener (Der Golem), Reiniger had an astonishing facility with cutting–holding the scissors still in her right hand, and manipulating the paper at lightning speed with her left hand so that the cut always went in the right direction. She drew the storyboards and devised the plots and characters, which were closely linked[1]. William Moritz describes it as “a brilliant feature, a wonderful film full of charming comedy, lyrical romance, vigorous and exciting battles, eerie magic, and truly sinister, frightening evil.”

The score for Prince Achmed again represents a new approach to music for silent film. Combining electronic and acoustic instruments, the score is structured around a pre-recorded score of sampled electronic loops and percussion. Against this, a live band will perform, consisting of two keyboards, soprano saxophone, & trombone. The music is through-composed, seasoned with elements of improvisation, and invokes elements of jazz, blues, minimalism and classical music.

Taken from The Arabian Nights, The Adventure of Prince Achmed tells the story of a wicked sorcerer who tricks Prince Achmed into mounting a magical flying horse and sends the rider off on a flight to his death. But the prince foils the magician’s plan, and soars headlong into a series of wondrous adventures — joining forces with Aladdin and the Witch of the Fiery Mountains, doing battle with the sorcerer’s army of monsters and demons, and falling in love with the beautiful Princess Peri Banu.

The story is one that will appeal to both young and old, with a strong narrative, surprising twists and turns, and beautiful images that inspire awe and wonder. The program runs a little over an hour in length.

“Johnston’s soundtrack adds an extra dimension to the 2D-nature of the animation, with energetic jazz layered over the pre-recorded percussion track that builds up and flows through the film. While Johnston and Reiniger’s compositions are each complex in their own ways, they come together simply and beautifully, stripping animation back to its abstract qualities of light, shadow, image and sound.”

–Anna Madeleine, The Guardian, 19 Jan 2015

(additional media extracts below)

A sample of Prince Achmed with score

Performances include, The 2014 Sydney Vivid Festival, MONA FOMA (Tasmania), The Capital Jazz Project (Canberra), the Parramatta Riverside Theatres and Randwick Town Hall (Sydney).

“…an atmospheric, occasionally hard-edged yet utterly charming film score that is. . . texturally and stylistically diverse. . . any attempts to pigeon-hole Johnston are an exercise in futility. There are consistent themes that run through the score, which explores Gamelan-like tuned percussion, and knotty explorations of both complex counterpoint and irregular meters. Irrespective of the direction(s) he heads to next, it will be well worth keeping a watchful eye out for anything that Johnston pursues.”

–John Kelman, allaboutjazz.com

“If you’ve seen the film, to hear the music is to have the magical images once more dancing before your eyes. … Johnston’s intricate score…deepens the mystery of the images, while highlighting the humour, drama, and, of course, romance. To listen to it while highlighting the humour, drama, and, of course, romance. To listen to it independently of the film to be struck by the breadth of musical ideas that can hurl themselves from zaniness once moment to explosive grooves the next, and on to eerie beauty, while leaving scope for pithy little solos. …worth the cost of admission…”

– John Shand, Sydney Morning Herald, October 29, 2018

“… a joy, with rousing sax & trombone melodies giving way to some sultry organ, before a lazy, hazy trombone solo takes things out to a fiery conclusion… contain a wealth of groove and funky, futuristic samples, synths, and loops, moving parts of the album into almost full blown electronica. For jazz purists, “Alladin’s Tale” is a lovely piece, smoky organ and old school sax/trombone melodies just grabbing the listener and refusing to let go, while closer “Return to the Land of the Mortals” bridges the gap between classic jazz and spacey electronica.”

– Sea of Tranquility

“… referencing soul jazz (two keyboardists!), Tom Waits-ian percussion, and memories of the Penguin Cafe Orchestra.

– Il Manifesto (ITALY)

This is a complex album, one that needs close attention paid to it as the musicians embrace themes which may or may not be repeated, going off in tangents to the original, with trombone often playing a heavy bass part to contrast against the sax. The keyboards and drums are often in the background, with the brass taking centre stage. It is an album the definitely requires repeated listening, as the first time I felt there were certain passages and sections which were passing me by, all of which made far more sense the more time I allowed myself with the album. Well worth investigating…

– Jazz Music Archives (New Zealand)

“…his music for Lotte Reiniger’s classic 1926 silent film The Adventures of Prince Achmed…wakes up a near century-old classic by serving up a fresh aural slice from the mystical past of Arabia in such a manner that it brings to life not just locale, but smell, taste, sound, etc., too. And magically…in a manner that is far from gratuitously Middle Eastern…a refreshing change from almost all attempts to make the soundtrack “authentic” to the setting.”

– Raul da Gama, Jazz da Gama (CANADA)

“Johnston is creating a new perspective for this film, rather than composing music of the era. …Each segment of Johnston’s score stands on its own merit… Anyone who appreciates Johnston’s composing, whether for his bands or earlier soundtracks (including a few unreleased modern-era films), will devour the wide-ranging, free-spirited music heard here.”

–Ken Dryden, NYC Jazz Record

“4/5 stars. …Johnston’s swirling, engaging and frequently cyclic score… heighten and accentuate Prince Achmed’s adventures… Johnston’s themes regularly embody the personality of the movie’s characters. …there is plenty to hear which is enticing, exciting and sometimes enthralling.”

–Doug Simpson, Audio Audition

Categories
Recordings

The Adventures of Prince Achmed

This CD contains music that was composed as a soundtrack which is performed live with the The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926) by Lotte Reiniger, a silent silhouette animation, considered by many to be the first feature length animated film, and based upon One Thousand and One Nights, a collection of Middle Eastern folk tales often known in English as The Arabian Nights. The music, which when performed with the film comprises a continuous score of 65 minutes, is here broken into individual tracks. It is performed live by a quartet of soprano sax, trombone, and two keyboards, against a pre-recorded track of samples, loops and live drums.

Released October 26, 2018, on Asynchronous Records

Musicians

Phillip Johnston: soprano saxophone
James Greening: trombone
Alister Spence: organ, keyboards
Casey Golden: organ, keyboards
Nic Cecire: drums

Credits

All tracks by Phillip Johnston © Jedible Music (BMI)
Recorded in Aug/Sep 2013 at Q Studios, Sydney
Record and pre-mix engineer: Richard Hundy
Final mix and mastering by Paul Bromley/Tanuki Studios
Cover design: Keith Lobue

Special thanks to: Milestone Films, British Film Institute, Kino Films, AIM/Q Studios, Newcastle Conservatorium, (Richard Vella, Colin Spiers, Philip Matthias).

“Johnston’s soundtrack adds an extra dimension to the 2D-nature of the animation, with energetic jazz layered over the pre-recorded percussion track that builds up and flows through the film. While Johnston and Reineger’s compositions are each complex in their own ways, they come together simply and beautifully, stripping animation back to its abstract qualities of light, shadow, image and sound.”

–Anna Madeleine, The Guardian, 2015 (MONA FOMA)

Categories
Recordings

Live At The Hillside Club

Joel Forrester/Phillip Johnston: Live At The Hillside Club

Released in 2011 on Asynchronous Records

Live At The Hillside Club is a live recording of the duo of the co-leaders of The Microscopic Septet, Joel Forrester (piano) and Phillip Johnston (soprano sax) on a US West Coast tour in 2010, playing a combination of Joel Forrest and Thelonious Monk tunes. Forrester and Johnston have been playing together as a duo since the early 70s, about 35 years at the time of this recording.

“There is a certain sparkling, effervescent quality to this music, an elegance rich and satisfying like a great scene from a Woody Allen movie when they were still worth seeing. Mr. Johnston is a fine soloist who brings poignancy and poise to these songs. Mr. Forrester’s playing is refined yet economical, sounding as if he is drawing from a wealth of styles and traditions. Even the four Monk covers are done with both craft and reverence and filled with little surprising twists. . .This disc is one of the most laid back and enchanting offerings we’ve listed in recent memory.”

– Bruce Lee Gallanter, Downtown Music Gallery

Album review on Jazz Times