Vincent Moon: How can we use computers,
cameras, microphones to represent the world
in an alternative way, as much as possible?
How, maybe, is it possible to use the Internet
to create a new form of cinema?
And actually, why do we record?
Well, it is with such simple questions in mind
that I started to make films 10 years ago,
first with a friend, Christophe Abric.
He had a website, La Blogotheque,
dedicated to independent music.
We were crazy about music.
We wanted to represent music in a different way,
to film the music we love, the musicians we admired
as much as possible
far from the music industry
and far from the cliches attached to it.
We started to publish every week
sessions on the Internet.
We are going to see a few extracts now.
From Grizzly Bear in the shower
to Sigur Ros in a Parisian cafe,
from Phoenix playing by the Eiffel Tower
to Tom Jones in his hotel room in New York,
from the Arcade Fire in an elevator
in the Olympiades
to Beirut going down stairs in Brooklyn,
from [??] in a car
to the National around a table at night
in the south of France,
from Bon Iver playing with some friends
in an apartment in Montmarte
to Yeasayer having a long night,
and many, many, many more
unknown or very famous bands.
We published all those things for free on the Internet,
and we wanted to share
all those films and represent music in a different way.
We wanted to create another type of intimacy
using all those new technologies.
At the time, 10 years ago actually,
there was no such project on the Internet,
and I guess that's why the project
we were making, the Take Away Shows,
got quite successful,
reaching millions of viewers.
After a while, I got a bit "Mmmm,"
I wanted to do something else.
I felt the need to travel and
to discover some other music,
to explore the world,
going to other corners,
and actually it was also this idea of nomadic cinema,
sort of, that I had in mind.
How could the use of new technologies
and the road could fit together?
How could I have my films in a bus
crossing the Andes?
So I went on a five-year travels around the globe.
I started at the time in the [???] filming
my music le bon Collection Petites Planètes,
which was also an homage to
French filmmaker Chris Marker.
We're going to see now a few more extracts
of those new films.
From the Tecnobrega diva of
northern Brazil, Gaby Amarantos
to a female ensemble in Chechnya,
from experimental electronic music in Singapore
with One Man Nation
to Brazilian [???] Tom Zé singing
on his rooftop in Sao Paolo,
from the Bambir, the great rock band from Armenia
to some traditional songs
in the restaurant in Tbilisi, Georgia,
from the White Shoes,
a great [??] band from Jakarta, Indonesia
to Dakha Brakha, the revolutionary band
from Kiev, Ukraine,
from Tomi Lebrero
and his band and his friends
in Buenos Aires, Argentina,
to many other places
and musicians around the world.
My desire was to make it as a truck.
To do all those films,
it would have been impossible
with a big company behind me,
with a structure or anything.
I was traveling alone with a backpack:
computer camera, microphones in it.
Alone, actually, but just with just local people,
meeting my team, which was absolutely not
professional people, on the spot there,
going from one place to another
and to make cinema as a truck.
I really believed that cinema could be
this very simple thing.
I want to make a film and you're going to give me
a place to stay for the night.
I give you a moment of cinema
and you offer me a [???].
Well, or other drinks, depending on where you are.
In Peru, they drink pisco sour.
Oh, well, when I arrived in Peru, actually,
I had no idea
about what I would do there,
and I just had one phone number, actually,
of one person.
Three months later,
after traveling all around the country, I had recorded
33 films, only with the help of local people,
only with the help of people
that I was asking all the time the same question:
what is important to record
here today?
By living in such a way,
by working without any structure,
I was able to react to the moment
and to decide, oh, this is important to make now.
This is important to record that whole person.
This is important to create this exchange.
When I went to Chechnya,
the first person I met looked at me and was like,
"What are you doing here?
Are you a journalist? NGO? Politics?
What kind of problems are you going to study?"
Well, I was there to research
on Sufi rituals in Chechnya, actually,
incredible culture of Sufism in Chechnya,
which is absolutely unknown outside of the region.
As soon as people understood
that I would give them those films,
I would publish them online for free
under a creative commons license,
but I would also really give them to the people
and I would let them do what they want with it.
I just want to represent them under a beautiful light.
I just want to portray them in a way that
their grandchildren are going
to look at their grandfather,
and they're going to be like,
"Whoa, my grandfather is as cool as Beyoncé."
It's a really important thing.
(Applause)
It's really important,
because that's the way
people are going to look at their own culture,
at their own land.
They're going to think about it differently.
It may be a way to maintain a certain diversity.
Why you will record?
Hmm. There's a really good quote
by American thinker Hakim Bey
which says, "Every recording
is a tombstone of a live performance."
It's a really good sentence to keep in mind
nowadays in an era saturated by images.
What's the point of that? Where do we go with it?
I was researching. I was still keeping this idea
in mind: what's the point?
I was researching on music, trying to pull,
trying to get closer to a certain origin of it.
Where is this all coming from?
I am French. I had no idea about
what I would discover, which is a very simple thing:
everything was sacred, at first,
and music was spiritual healing.
How could I use my camera,
my little tool, to get closer
and maybe not only capture the trends
but find an equivalent, the [???], maybe,
something in complete harmony
with the people?
That was, that is now,
my new researches I'm making
on spirituality, on new spirits around the world.
Maybe a few more extracts now,
from the Aluk To Raja funeral ritual in Indonesia
to an Easter ceremony in the north of Ethiopia;
from jathilan, a popular trance ritual
on the island of Java,
to an Umbanda in the north of Brazil;
the Sufi rituals of Chechnya
to a mass in the holiest church of Armenia,
some Sufi songs in Harar,
the holy city of Ethiopia
to an Ayahuasca ceremony
deep in the Amazon of Peru with the Shipibo;
then to my new project, the one I'm doing now,
here in Brazil name "Híbridos."
I'm doing it with Priscilla Telmon of [East Reach?]
on the new spiritualities all around the country.
This is my quest, my own little quest of what I call
experimental ethnography,
trying to
hybrid all those different genres,
trying to regain itself in complexity.
Why do we record?
I was still there.
I really believe cinema teaches us to see.
The way we show the world
is going to change the way we see this world,
and we live in a moment where the mass media
are doing a terrible, terrible job
at representing the world:
violence, extremists,
only spectacular events,
only simplifications of everyday life.
I think we are recording
to regain a certain complexity.
To reinvent life today,
we have to make new forms of images.
And it's very simple.
Muito obrigado.
(Applause)
Moderator: Vincent, Vincent, Vincent.
Merci. We have to prepare for
the following performance,
and I have a question for you,
and the question is this:
you show up in places like the ones you just
have shown us, and you are carrying a camera
and I assume that you are welcome
but you are not always absolutely welcome.
You walk into sacred rituals,
private moments in a village, a town,
a group of people.
How do you break the barrier
when you show up with a lens?
VM: I think you break it with your body,
more than with your knowledge.
That's what it teaches me to travel,
to trust the memory of the body
more than the memory of the brain.
The respect is stepping forward,
not stepping backward, and I really think that
by engaging your body in the
moment, in the ceremony,
in the places, people welcome you
and understand your energy.
Moderator: You told me that most of the videos
you have made are actually one single shot.
You don't do much editing.
I mean, you edited the ones for us
at the beginning of the sessions
because of the length and etc.
Otherwise, you just go in and
capture whatever happens in front of your eyes
without much planning, and so is that the case?
It's correct?
VM: My idea is that I think that
as long as we don't cut,
as long as we let the viewer watch,
more and more viewers are going to feel closer,
is going to get closer to the moment,
to that moment and to that place.
I really think that's a matter of respecting the viewer,
to not cut all the time from one place to another,
to just let the time go.
Moderator: Tell me in a few words
your new project, "Híbridos," here in Brazil.
Just before coming to TEDGlobal, you have actually
been traveling around the country for that.
Tell us a couple of things.
VM: "Híbridos" is, I really believe Brazil,
far from the cliches, is the greatest
religious country in the world,
the greatest country in terms of spirituality
and in experimentations in spiritualities,
and it's a big project I'm doing over this year,
which is researching in very
different regions of Brazil,
in very different forms of [???]
and trying to understand how people live together
with spirituality nowadays.
Moderator: The man who is going
to appear onstage momentarily,
and Vincent's going to introduce him,
is one of the subjects of one of his past videos.
When did you do a video with him?
VM: I guess four years ago,
four years in my first travel.
Moderator: So it was one of your first
ones in Brazil.
VM: It was amongst the first ones in Brazil, yeah.
I shot the film and the rest of it
in the place where he is from.
Moderator: So let's introduce him.
Who are we waiting for?
VM: I'll just make it very short. It's a very great honor
for me to welcome onstage one of the greatest
Brazilian musicians of all time.
Please welcome Nana Vasconcelos.
Moderator: Nana Vasconcelos!
(Applause)
(Music)
Nana Vasconcelos: Let's go to the jungle.
(Applause)