This video is this: Sto, a Brooklyn painter (you may recognize his work from any picture of any show at 285 Kent – his black spirals are the behind-the-stage mural) hangs a giant canvas behind Kid Millions, who is beginning his daily drumroll meditation. Sto begins to paint with a watered-down black; the twists and turns of his work drip down the canvas. Kid Millions drums and an ambient tone joins him. Someone walks in and takes an iPhone photo of the creation. Sto's spiky head bobs and dips as he adds a dab here, a dab there. Another drummer joins Kid Millions and the drum-roll is doubled: the camera vibrates and bubbles. Sto is wearing a Flipper parody shirt that says "Sex Bong Baby". He starts to paint the floor with his fluid, subconscious lines. We see the paint; we see the cameraman, Nick Chatfield-Taylor, who is responsible for the best Parts & Labor music videos. Sto keeps painting; grey is added; yellow is splashed, an oboist joins Kid Millions. For another ten minutes or so (we're at minute seven now), Sto continues to paint and musicians continue to join Kid Millions mantra-esque jam session; the pressure is building into the gradual fade; the transcendentalist in the walls meets the transcendentalist in the music, and their ghosts mingle freely in the air.
Man Forever is on tour now. His album, Pansophical Cataract, is available on Thrill Jockey.