Watching Doug Aitken's Autumn, I couldn't help but feel that its soundtrack was acceptable, but somehow nonetheless wrong. It seemed to me, and seemed strongly, that an altogether different track should have accompanied these shadowed, bleached, 1990s-shot impressions of teenage in slow motion.
I've only just realized which track that is, and, thanks to the bewildering power of the internet, we can all experience the its new, more powerful union with Aitken's images. The embedded player above contains Autumn, which you should mute first and then play.
Now immediately play the video embedded below. Start it as soon as possible after you start Autumn, then scroll back up and watch the latter with its new backing song.
Uncannily suitable, huh?
I've only just realized which track that is, and, thanks to the bewildering power of the internet, we can all experience the its new, more powerful union with Aitken's images. The embedded player above contains Autumn, which you should mute first and then play.
Now immediately play the video embedded below. Start it as soon as possible after you start Autumn, then scroll back up and watch the latter with its new backing song.
Uncannily suitable, huh?
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