Seamus Murphy

Seamus Murphy began photographing Afghanistan in 1994, and his new book A Darkness Visible: Afghanistan, is a classic on the rise of the Taliban and...

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All and Everyone

on 27 November 2011 by Seamus Murphy

Over the next twelve days we will be featuring a new music video featuring PJ Harvey by Seamus Murphy daily. The accompanying text by Seamus will give an insight into his thoughts about making the videos. ENJOY!

'All And Everyone' is the longest track on the album. Dark, formal and auspicious. It starts with epic gravitas and grandeur building to a controlled and inevitable finale, like death itself. The care-free sing-along of the refrain: "As we advancing, in the sun, singing death to all and everyone" is like soldiers meeting their end with a tune in their heads, buoyed by love of each other and accepting their lot with a jeer. Its slowed-down delivery extends time like slow motion, a deliberate heightening of mortal last moments. It demands reac¬tion and makes me think how cursory is the nature of killing and being killed during war, making it all the more worthless. It was the film I most looked forward to making, and most dreaded. I found a clue to it in Essex at Old Leigh, a place recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 and where the River Thames meets the sea. The film starts out with some imagery from Norfolk. With the ominous change in the music comes a day of brilliant morning sunshine under the pier at Southend. Later in the day the weather turned filthy, becoming a snow blizzard and I had to spend an unplanned second night in Southend. The next morning a few miles along the coast towards London, heavy snows forced me to stop driving and I pulled in at Old Leigh. I got bored stuck in the car and headed for the seashore. The tide was out and ropes and chains of fishing boats and other craft at anchor were being covered with wet snow, the scene resembled an art-directed battlefield in the grey light. I got soaked shooting this but it was better than listening to people on the radio going on endlessly on about local councils failing to grit their roads. Where was the Dunkirk spirit? After a while I turned around and was dumb-struck by red roses delicately placed in chains on the jetty wall. Discreet enough to miss if you weren't on the shore looking back or in a boat. Were they put there for a particular victim, a memorial to all drowned fishermen, or an expression of doomed romantic love? This line of flowers, with the changing direction and speed of the falling snow gave me something to start working with to approach 'All And Everyone'. I thank the snow for making me stop. The final sequence with the boat being launched and scudding across the sea was shot looking down over Chesil Cove in Dorset. I often had the languid saxophone that ends the track in my head when shooting lengthy sequences. My fear when shooting it was the boat would stop too long or fall out of the bottom of the frame before exiting the frame on left. It slimly made it. I loved the sea, the scale, the gathering gulls following the vessel, that it goes on that little bit too long and the tiny patch of land that is forever England.

 

PJ Harvey Web Site

www.pjharvey.net

 

England Photo Essay by Seamus Murphy

http://www.viiphoto.com/showstory.php?nID=1230

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