
Lisa MacKinney in 'Mystic Eyes.'
In 2006, I shot a performance film of the noise duo Second Viennese School; Michael Munson and Lisa MacKinney. Their particular brand of ’sonic terrorism’ takes the form of long (40 minute), hypnotic pieces, constructed from early house beats looped to form a rhythmic foundation, which are then layered with live organ drones, repetitive chord strumming and guitar feedback. The effect is mesmerising and immersive; the listener becomes lost in the gradual, ascending, organic flow of harmonic collisions until you swear you’re hearing things that aren’t even there, like million-angel choirs and glaciers collapsing into the ocean.

A still from the 2006 Second Viennese School performance film "SVS".
Late last year I had the good fortune to once again team up with Lisa MacKinney, who now performs mainly solo, under the name Mystic Eyes. We’d discussed making another musical document, but I wanted this one to be a more minimalist affair than the previous film, which had the (deliberate) 60’s aesthetic of a black and white archival film from Andy Warhol’s Factory – raw, jagged and industrial.
I wanted the film-making process to mirror, as closely as possible, the style and structure of the music; a single take that would last the duration of the piece (around 28 minutes) to reflect the unbroken sonic line of the music, that would begin in a wide shot and gradually move into a roving close up and become immersed in the detail of the image, just as the listener is drawn into the rich and resonant depths of what seems at first to be very simple music.

Lisa amid the tools of her trade.
We filmed the performance against a white cyclorama, as I wanted to focus purely on the technology and instruments used to create the music, and the human operator of that equipment, decontextualised from any particular environment or surrounding. The stark essence of the result is particularly pleasing and pure.
I guess the concept for this film doesn’t exactly entail screenwriting per se, but there’s an element of ‘design’ in allowing the style of the music to dictate the visual execution; an example of the form-follows-function principle at work.

The titular Mystic Eyes.
For trivia fans, the title sequence – a close-up of Lisa’s eyes under the credits – is intended as an homage to the opening of Roman Polanski’s ‘Repulsion’.
The film was shot by Adrian Price, cinematographer of the AFI Award-nominated documentary ‘Beyond Our Ken’ (see it, it is great), and the sound was recorded by James Dean (not the dead method actor, the chap from Tugboat). A special thanks also to Tash Blankfield, who loaned us her enviable photography studio for the day.
‘Mystic Eyes’ was completed in early March 2009, and was recently accepted into Perth’s Revelation Film Festival.