Elektro Moskva is a 2013 Austrian music documentary film directed and written by Elena Tikhonova and Dominik Spritzendorfer. It is their directorial debut. The film is an essayistic exploration of Soviet and post-Soviet "electro-history", spanning from Theremin to synthesizers to KGB surveillance tools.

Elektro Moskva
Theatrical release poster
Directed byElena Tikhonova, Dominik Spritzendorfer
Written byElena Tikhonova, Dominik Spritzendorfer
Produced byDominik Spritzendorfer
Narrated byAndrey Andrianov
CinematographyDominik Spritzendorfer
Edited byMichael Palm
Music byYuri Klevanski
Production
company
Rotor Film
Distributed byfilmdelights
Release date
Running time
89 minutes
Country
  • Austria
LanguagesRussian, English (narration)

Content

edit

The documentary delves into the nearly century-long history of Soviet and Russian experimental electronic music, employing archival footage and contemporary interviews, for example with musician Alexei Borisov, to offer insight into the cultural and social changes within Russia. It pays homage to the pioneers of futuristic sounds, illustrating the evolution of electronic music within both Soviet and post-Soviet contexts. Additionally, it underscores the relationship between musical technology and military research, the clandestine nature of musical experimentation by circuit-benders amidst political censorship, and the ingenuity of the individuals responsible for pioneering electronic instruments.

Production

edit

Elektro Moskva is an independently produced documentary, Dominik Spritzendorfer served as the producer. The film received financial grants from Austrian Ministry of Education and Lower Austria cultural fund. The picture was shot over a period of eight years. Interview with music critic Artemy Troitsky did not end up in the final cut and is available as a DVD extra. The film features the final interview of Leon Theremin which was shot by Sergei Zezyulkov, and was never released before. It serves as a prologue and epilogue to the documentary.[1]

Release

edit

The film had its world premiere at Diagonale in April 2013.[2] The same year it was also screened at the Marseille Festival of Documentary Film.

Reception

edit

The film received a positive reception from international critics.[3][4] Austrian outlet Skug described it as "one of the most important music history films of our time".[5]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Denis Boyarinov. "«"Электро Москва" — самый русский фильм на Земле!» - ЕЛЕНА ТИХОНОВА — АВТОР ДОКУМЕНТАЛЬНОГО ФИЛЬМА «ЭЛЕКТРО МОСКВА», ПОСВЯЩЕННОГО ИСТОРИИ СОВЕТСКОЙ ЭЛЕКТРОННОЙ МУЗЫКИ, — О ТОМ, КАК ВОСЕМЬ ЛЕТ СНИМАЛАСЬ ЭТА КАРТИНА, И О ТОМ, ЧТО ТАКОЕ «СДЕЛАТЬ ПО-РУССКИ»". Colta.
  2. ^ "Elektro Moskva - Dokumentarfilm, AT 2013, Farbe, 89 min., OmeU - Diagonale 2013". Diagonale.
  3. ^ "Elektro Moskva: FIDMarseille Review". Hollywood Reporter.
  4. ^ Tom Keough. "'Elektro Moskva' peeks at Soviet music behind Iron Curtain". Seattle Times.
  5. ^ "»Elektro Moskva«: Moskau unter Strom". Skug.
edit