The world is quite fucked up right now and while it's completely possible for us, all of us, to change things to mitigate the situations there is little cause to believe that will actually happen. And the final sequence of the Saturn V leaving the launch pad in slow motion coupled with the beautiful, haunting score to it blew me away in the moment and I can still recall its impact now. Since then many of those images have come to mind at various times. The epic sweep of the imagery and music gripped me and held my attention throughout. Well, Beethoven at least, so the concept of a long form piece was engaging. I was a prog rock fan with an appreciation for classical music. Much like the author I was floored by the music. But I recall starting to 'get' the symbolism and the narrative the images convey. The lack of 'anything happening' lasted a few minutes. I recall it as a pivotal moment of my 22 year old life. I was there because Godfrey Reggio came into the sandwich shop I was a partner in and because I was friends of friends of some of the guys on the camera crews shooting footage in the Southwest and working with Alton. I was living in Santa Fe in the '70s and was at that first screening, it was the world premier, at the Lensic Theater. The article is a moving tribute to the power of Reggio's vision and the brilliance of Glass' score.
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