2010-01-010時間 29分
ユーザースコア
概要
Roscoe Holcomb was one of America’s greatest banjo players, a musician whose haunting vocal intonations, Old Regular Baptist in tradition, gave Bob Dylan and Eric Clapton the chills and gave John Cohen’s 1963 film High Lonesome Sound its name. Drawing on footage he shot in 1962 and 1974 in Daisy, Kentucky, Cohen made this incredibly moving portrait of Holcomb, for whom the holy spirit always rose up plain and true: “Sometimes, you know, you feel like playing certain songs. I feel like playing the old banjo, I feel like playing some religious songs. I sit down, I feel lonesome. I could play you some of these old religious songs and it just fits me plumb through. Or I could pick up the guitar—the guitar is mostly for the blues. It’s just according to what a man feels, what he’s got on his mind.” His body ravaged by a life in the coal mines and sawmills, Roscoe Holcomb died in 1981 at the age of 68. — Museum of Modern Art
1962-01-01
Instrument
Benjamin Smoke
Museum Hours
Lucky Three: An Elliott Smith Portrait
Amber City
Ballad of Philip Guston
Chain
Lost Book Found
Drink Deep
This Is a History of New York
Buried in Light
Evening's Civil Twilight in Empires of Tin
Just Hold Still
A Tale of Two Cities
The Film That Buys the Cinema
Counting
Sonic Cinema: Sparklehorse
4:44 (from her house home)
Gravity Hill Newsreels: Occupy Wall Street
Helianthus Corner Blues
Spirit (Smells Like Teen Spirit)
20 Little Films
World Without End (No Reported Incidents)
Crossing Paths with Luce Vigo
Bury Me Not
Birth of a Nation
The Foxx and Little Vic
R.E.M.: In View 1988-2003 (The Best of R.E.M.)
Night Scene New York
This Climate
On Essex Road
Long for the City (Patti Smith in New York)
Little, Big, and Far
Glueman
Makeshift (for Mekas)
free
Nightswimming
Roscoe Holcomb from Daisy, Kentucky
The Passage Clock: For Walter Benjamin
Nice Evening, Transmission Down