The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #163836   Message #3912632
Posted By: GUEST,CJB
23-Mar-18 - 04:52 AM
Thread Name: 'Travelling For A Living' free on BFI
Subject: 'Travelling For A Living' free on BFI
"Travelling For A Living" the film about The Watersons is available for free viewing on the BFI site.

https://player.bfi.org.uk/free/film/watch-travelling-for-a-living-1966-online

http://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/c44f147a01b94df9a42502bafac5915d

"These are the Watersons, a very important part of the revival of traditional British music. They live in Hull." A British road movie of sorts, this rich and vital film follows the group on the folk club circuit, at home and in studios. It's rewarding on several levels - whether your main interest is Hull, the folk revival or documentary filmmaking - and repays repeated viewings. Seminal and superb.

Though not entirely above romanticism (Humberside isn't quite Yorkshire's answer to the Mississippi Delta), nor occasional swipes at 'pop' folk (B. Dylan included), the film, and the group, are admirably clear-eyed about English folk music: not a 'living form', only its 'still warm ashes'. Heading his own small production company, director Derrick Knight was a significant and underrated filmmaker who played a part in modernising British documentary's style. Though not pure 'direct cinema' (it has a narrator), this film is influenced by innovative French and American techniques: shooting on location with a lightweight easily moveable 16mm camera, avoiding artificial lighting and capturing sound in synch with picture. His company also crossed the boundaries between film and TV - by independently producing films broadcast on the box it was well ahead of its time.

This one was shown on BBC2 on 21 May 1966, at 8:50pm.

Released 1966
Country United Kingdom
Location Kingston upon Hull

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