Empire - Andy Warhol film revolution

“Empire” is a film by Andy Warhol consisting of eight hours straight of the Empire State Building, doing nothing.

Warhol filmed the skyscraper between about 8:10 p.m. and 2:30 a.m. on July 25 and 26, 1964 from the 41st floor of the Time & Life building using a rented 16mm Arriflex camera push-processed to ASA 1000 to compensate for the dark conditions of filming which gives the film its graininess. It was filmed at 24 frames per second and is meant to be seen in slow motion at 16 frames per second, extending the 6 1/2 hour length of the film to 8 hours and 5 minutes.

The film does not have conventional narrative or characters, and largely reduces the experience of cinema to the passing of time. The passage from daylight to darkness becomes the film’s narrative, while the protagonist is the iconic building that was once the tallest in New York City. According to Warhol, the purpose of the film - perhaps his most famous and influential cinematic work - is 'to see time go by'.

To all of us, time is valuable, time is precious. Warhol knew this and he chose to spend his time to bring us 'Empire'.

"Empire" had its premier on Saturday, March 6, 1965 at the City Hall Cinema, 170 Nassau Street, in Manhattan.

Invitation card to the first screening of Empire

Making a film score for Andy Warhol's 'Empire' was a unique challenge. At over eight hours long and with so little happening on screen, how does one create a soundtrack that can engage the audience in witnessing 'the passing of time' as Warhol wrote about 'Empire', whilst not drawing overt attention to the score itself and away from the film?

As Warhol stated that the purpose of the film was "to see time go by", by definition it never repeats. Adkins followed with a work that never repeats for the whole duration of the film.


To structure the work Adkins used a bell-ringing pattern—NY Littleport Caters, first rung on 23rd October 2016 in New York. The bell ringing sequence (and I’ll simply quote the liner notes here) is an example of change-ringing technique—in which the nine bells are permuted continuously for several hours. From this Adkins created a nine-chord harmonic sequence each with nine layers of sonic material including old instruments and other ambient sounds recorded in large architectural structures. The Warhol film is stored on 10 film reels of 48 minutes each. In Adkin's piece nine permutations occur every 48 minutes—the length of one of ten reels of film for 'Empire'. The bell-pattern cycles through nine iterations, the combination of layers being unique in each occurrence.

When viewing the film the attention of the audience is drawn to the tiniest detail, for example when a flash bulb goes off close to the top of the building. The little subtle moments we take for granted suddenly become interesting. It becomes a sort of meditation. Adkins work has a similar effect on the listener. As you are drawn slowly into the depths of the piece you hear the tiniest changes of detail. It documents the passage of time.

How does Adkins keep the listener involved? We choose what we hear when listening; our listening contours the sound that we hear; we have the capacity to transform material so it becomes filled with our ideas, our preoccupations of what we should hear. Listening is not a holistic event. You extract only what you want from the moment by making that part your focus

The 51 minutes of the album release presents the prime bell ringing harmonic sequence in their original order (1 to 9) and concludes with a section of sound taken from the tenth film reel which has almost completely lost the original melodic sequence and supplemented it with additional distortion added to emphasize the increasing sense of being lost in the total darkness and the graininess of the film. As it fades away it leaves the listener lost in the depths of the art as viewers of Warhols film must have felt when night enveloped the Empire State Building.

Don't come to see me, I'm not here anymore

I’m pleased to give you a new work using some sounds from a new Native Instruments Kontakt library I’m putting together for the studio. The work features some dialog from the Barry Burmange & Delia Derbyshire piece - There Is a God from the “Amor Dei: A Vision of God” work.

Barry Bermange said that he himself thought of Amor Dei as ‘rather in the manner of a Renaissance painting with the believers in God in the foreground or centre and half-hidden disbelievers looking out from shadowy places round the edge of the painting’.

Viola Organista

Nearly 500 years after Leonardo da Vinci sketched his plans for a musical instrument he dubbed the Viola Organista, Polish concert pianist Slawomir Zubrzycki spent more than 5,000 hours making da Vinci's idea a reality. This is an amazing instrument.

The first CD album of the viola organista solo recital out on November 3rd, 2015!! More about in English here: http://www.violaorganista.com See also: https://www.facebook.com/ViolaOrganista First performance of the viola organista made by Sławomir Zubrzycki. INTERNATIONAL ROYAL CRACOW PIANO FESTIVAL 18TH OCTOBER 2013, Aula Florianka.

There is a Kickstarter campaign to make a recording of the instrument that you may be interested in joining.

CYMATICS: Science Vs. Music

How absolutely cool is this ... great film, great science.

► NEW VIDEO Automatica: http://nigelstanford.com/y/Cytext-Automatica ► Album & 4k Video: http://nigelstanford.com/y/Cytext-Cymatics ► Spotify: http://NigelStanford.com/y/Spotify Download in 4k / HD. All of the science experiments in the video are real. Watch behind the scenes and see how it was made.