Description
1. David Byrne’s American Utopia Official Trailer (8/24/20) (:30)
2. Sneak Peek at American Utopia (08/24/20)
3. Spike Lee-directed David Byrne’s American Utopia. The concert film is based on David Byrne‘s 2019 Broadway show of the same name, which is also inspired by Byrne’s recent American Utopia album. The footage above showcases Byrne sticking his head from behind a curtain made of chain-mail before taking the stage with his band for the cover of Janelle Monáe’s “Hell You Talmbout,” a 2013 track that protests police brutality. The trailer features stunning camerawork signature of Lee, which also highlights the frenetic choreography provided by Annie-B Parson. Although the second run of Broadway shows has been pushed back due to COVID-19, the film was recorded in front of a live audience.
American Utopia ran on Broadway from October 2019 to February of this year and showcased Byrne touching on the state of America in front of an audience. It also included performances from his time with Talking Heads up to his recent solo album. What made performances stand out in this show was how the musicians were able to move around the stage. Even the drummers were handheld to keep anyone on stage from being stationary.
“What if we eliminate everything from the stage except the stuff we care about the most?” Byrne asks the audience in one scene. “Without cables or wires, what would be left? Well, it would be us, and you. And that’s what this show is.”
Cast
Musicians: Jacquelene Acevedo, Gustavo Di Dalva, Daniel Freedman, Chris Giarmo, Tim Keiper, Tendayi Kuumba,
Karl Mansfield, Mauro Refosco, Stéphane San Juan, Angie Swan, Bobby Wooten III,
Crew
Creative Concept and Music: David Byrne
Choreography and Musical Staging: Annie-B Parson
Production Consultant: Alex Timbers
Musical Director: Karl Mansfield
Lighting Designer: Rob Sinclair
Sound Designer: Pete Keppler
DVD Extras
4. The Evolution of AMERICAN UTOPIA 10/20/20: A behind the scenes featurette how David Byrne’s American Utopia came together
5. The Making of AMERICAN UTOPIA 10/10/20: An Inside Look
TOTAL RUNNING TIME: 1 Hour 53 Minutes
Sound: 2.0 Digital Dolby Stereo
Format: DVD-R
A NOTE FROM DAVID BYRNE
“Once in a while, various things one has been working on for years have an opportunity to converge, separate strands meet, and it all falls into place. As if they’d always been meant to come together. In reality, one can’t always plan it, though we might try…but happily this seems to be one of those times.
I often get asked, “What is this show about? What is this song about? What is the message, what are you trying to tell us?” My preferred answer would be to refer them to the quote from old-school Hollywood producer Samuel Goldwyn: “If you want to send a message, use Western Union!” It seems to me that in creating something—a song, a show, a blog post, a meal, a dance—a vision comes together, intuitively, gradually, bit by bit, little by little, and we don’t always know the totality of what we’ve made until we can actually see, hear and taste it.
A few years ago I did a show that involved high school color guards, and it wasn’t until I watched a run-through that I realized the show was about inclusion. The same thing is true with many of the songs I write. If we’re lucky during this process, we’ve remained true to some unconscious guiding principle – we often know what that is, even if it’s hard to articulate at the moment. It was that way with this show – it wasn’t conceived all at once, but rather one part of it led to the next, it evolved organically, and as soon as one element was resolved, the next one presented itself – a new puzzle and mystery to be solved.
And at some point, there it was.
In retrospect, it all made sense together, as if it had been conceived all at once. But the truth is I didn’t really know what it was about until it was close to up and running.
Here’s how my thinking went, and how the show evolved:
As I was recording the songs for my American Utopia album, it occurred to me that they would be exciting to play live – and I realized that a lot of my older material would fit right in. I imagined a live show…I pictured a lot of drummers, a kind of drum line/samba school/second line – that would create the rhythms. I had this vision of how exciting that would be – both for me and for an audience.
I also realized that what creates the biggest impact on an audience is performers. By that, I mean we might go ooh and ahh at pyrotechnics and wild video projections, but it’s the people on stage that interest and move us the most. The human connection, I realized, carries more weight and emotion than all the gadgets in the world. If I could foreground the performers, I might connect in a visceral and exciting way.
I wondered what that could be. Remember that.
A few years earlier, I had toured with the musical artist St. Vincent, and we had a large horn section that we decided should be completely mobile…not a complete surprise, as it’s not unusual for horn players to carry their instruments. We did a fair amount of moving around while playing, but certain elements of the band—the keyboard and the drums—were still firmly stuck in place. Could I liberate them, too? It turns out I could. Drummer Mauro Refosco, whom I’ve worked with for years, said we’d need 6 drummers to reproduce the necessary grooves…I checked the budget and it was tight, but I could afford it. And it turns out there is a technology that allows a keyboard to be mobile, so Karl Mansfield tested it out. Guitarists have been able to be untearthered for years – and now everyone else could do it, too.
I realized that with everyone untearthered, I could now have a completely empty stage. No wires, no mics, no gear, no risers. Wow. Obviously we’re going to move around. Visually, how does one emphasize that emptiness? With all this work to achieve emptiness, we want people to notice it! I hate seeing all the gear, speakers, stagehands, tech and support stuff that tends to crowd and surround concert stages. Now I can relegate all of that to the edges…but how to define our empty space?
At first, I thought maybe a curtain or scrim would hide it all. But then I realized that when we played outdoor festivals, the wind might turn scrims into sails. Scary. We tried some fabric that was more like a mesh, which let lots of air through, but even that wasn’t enough.
An associate mentioned that in Vegas, they sometimes use a fine lightweight chain for a curtain – and probably the wind would pass right through that. It did! And we could pass right through it, too – we could now enter and exit the stage anywhere. This was getting exciting. Solving one problem creates opportunities in other areas!
There were more technical hurdles, but by the time we’d begun rehearsing we’d solved most of them, and it became immediately apparent how liberating this experience was going to be. We had no idea how audiences would react, but for us it was simultaneously a steep learning curve—playing, moving and sometimes singing all at the same time—and a complete thrill.
Annie-B Parson, whom I’d worked with a number of times in the past, came on board and we began to collaborate on discovering movement that seemed appropriate for the songs. Sometimes she gave us complex movement to try, and sometimes, a little surprisingly, we’d discover, or at least I did, that the simplest idea could have a huge emotional impact.
Eventually I realized we were doing something no one had ever done before, or if they had, I didn’t know about it. When we began to put the show in front of audiences, I realized there was a kind of narrative there. Friends, and even strangers, began to point it out, and we all sensed it, as well. As a friend from London said, “The American Utopia of the title is there on stage.” I also realized that this narrative was not something told, it was something experienced.
Because of how theatrical the show is, others started telling me, “This needs to go to Broadway.” Why not? But what did that mean? Parked in a beautiful Broadway theater, we can perfect the sound, the lights, the movement – we don’t have to adapt to a new place every night! It was an exciting challenge – I realized a Broadway setting would likely be a different audience than the concert crowds I was used to. The Broadway crowd has slightly different expectations. There might even be audience members who don’t know me or my music – which for me is exciting. I thought to myself that this new context might be good – it might actually help to bring out the narrative arc a little bit more, to make it just a little more explicit. I asked Alex Timbers, whom I’d worked with twice before on musicals, to help. He brought some original and insightful ideas to the room, ideas I was too close to imagine, and we used those to build on what we had, to add some extra elements and nuance, while keeping what is integral to the show.
So, after all this, what do I think this show is about? I won’t say—that’s like putting the nose on the clown—but I will say the title is not ironic.
People also ask me whether I will be darting into a town car after these shows, or taking a flying leap onto my bicycle.
Take a wild guess.”
David Byrne
NYC 2019
Mike Scitcher (verified owner) –
Purchased David Byrnes’ American Utopia DVD. Byrne navigated us through the precarious years of the mid-to-late 80’s with his movie “True Stories”. A movie spoofing American tabloids. Byrne describe True Stories as ”60 minutes on Acid”. American Utopia creates social commentary through staging and motion…… he taps the nations zeitgeist offering navigation in a polarized country. The show develops the use of staging and motion capturing movie maker Spike Lee to produce Byrne’s vision, resulting in a nouveau delivery a Broadway production. MVR exceeded my requirements of service insuring my order arrived in 3 days at no additional cost in postage fee. Thank You…. Mike
Denver Cornett (verified owner) –
David Byrne’s American Utopia Broadway Show DVD came from MVR with all the extras of trailers, “making of. . .” While this comes in a clamshell disc holder with a free DVD Catalog, it is good quality and the only way to get it for an American Region 1 DVD player.
The show itself is stunningly visual with great songs and very artistically choreographed. Each musician is untethered by cords, microphones, wires. Sound is clear, as is visuals. Very cool. Glad to have a DVD of this show from MVR.
Lee Steele (verified owner) –
This was the only Region 1/USA version of this DVD I could find after months of searching. While I would have preferred Blu-Ray, the standard audio and video quality was very good. The performance was creatively and technically stunning, show-casing the inexhaustible genius of David Byrne. Camera work and lighting design were amazing. Loved the high-tech connectivity of the untethered mobile musicians/dancers — both to the audio pickup as well as the lighting system. Wicked cool. Also enjoyed the 50/50 mix of Byrne’s older standard songs with newer ones. A terrific performance.