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The songs of Fleetwood Mac are reinterpreted through the enigmatic world of Twin Peaks to create something familiar yet uncanny. Synchronised to hypnotic, refracted, mirrored and echoing images, this visual album creates a harmonic meeting point for these two disparate sources.
Creators Statement
Though they sit at different positions in our collective consciousness, both Fleetwood Mac and Twin Peaks hover in a strange limbo of populism and mysticism. Giants of popular culture, the worlds they create are both tantalising yet unknowable. Perhaps the power they have to draw us in is their cause for interpretation.
But what happens when these interpretations are filtered not just through one person, but through each other? Love, tragedy, beauty and magic all emerge from this unlikely partnership; their power heightened and intensified in each other’s reflection.
(Chemical enhancement recommended)
review
“Fleetwood Peaks: A Visual Album”: Devout “Twin Peaks” and Fleetwood Mac fans won’t want to miss this weird but hypnotic experimental project that pairs images and scenes from David Lynch’s cult classic 1990s TV series with music and videos of the iconic rock band. The result hews surprisingly true to the surreal spirit and style of Lynch’s influential creation. And it cleverly mixes Angelo Badalamenti’s unique, evocative score—one of the best made for a TV show—with Fleetwood Mac tunes. Dan Noall’s 60-minute feature is indeed geared to fans; it casts quite the visual and auditory stoner-like spell. It screens at 7 p.m. Dec. 11 at the Balboa and streams.
- Year2024
- Runtime60 minutes
- LanguageEnglish
- CountryUnited Kingdom
- DirectorDan Noall
The songs of Fleetwood Mac are reinterpreted through the enigmatic world of Twin Peaks to create something familiar yet uncanny. Synchronised to hypnotic, refracted, mirrored and echoing images, this visual album creates a harmonic meeting point for these two disparate sources.
Creators Statement
Though they sit at different positions in our collective consciousness, both Fleetwood Mac and Twin Peaks hover in a strange limbo of populism and mysticism. Giants of popular culture, the worlds they create are both tantalising yet unknowable. Perhaps the power they have to draw us in is their cause for interpretation.
But what happens when these interpretations are filtered not just through one person, but through each other? Love, tragedy, beauty and magic all emerge from this unlikely partnership; their power heightened and intensified in each other’s reflection.
(Chemical enhancement recommended)
review
“Fleetwood Peaks: A Visual Album”: Devout “Twin Peaks” and Fleetwood Mac fans won’t want to miss this weird but hypnotic experimental project that pairs images and scenes from David Lynch’s cult classic 1990s TV series with music and videos of the iconic rock band. The result hews surprisingly true to the surreal spirit and style of Lynch’s influential creation. And it cleverly mixes Angelo Badalamenti’s unique, evocative score—one of the best made for a TV show—with Fleetwood Mac tunes. Dan Noall’s 60-minute feature is indeed geared to fans; it casts quite the visual and auditory stoner-like spell. It screens at 7 p.m. Dec. 11 at the Balboa and streams.
- Year2024
- Runtime60 minutes
- LanguageEnglish
- CountryUnited Kingdom
- DirectorDan Noall