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Kevin Blechdom

Ruprechtskirche, 2008

Kevin Blechdom’s promoter called us a few minutes before the scheduled date for the TSM-shooting and asked if we had a back-up plan in case the weather would not change for the better. We hadn’t. But who would expect a snowstorm at the end of March? Anyway, the bad weather conditions before the shooting created at least a pretty nice contrast to the location we filmed Kristin – which is Kevin Blechdom’s real name – at: under blooming trees in a quiet corner of one of Vienna’s more crowded squares. This location seems almost too idyllic for Kevin Blechdom’s energetic music, which consists of simple but rousing electronics, fingerpicked banjo and Kristin’s insistent voice. Although the melodies often sound like they were taken from children’s songs, Kevin-Blechdom-music is pretty complex, with lots of different parts and unexpected turnarounds in her songs. Entertaining on the one hand, challenging on the other hand; and completely beyond anything when it comes to her live shows. It can easily happen that Kristin, who lives in the liberal bay area of San Francisco, performs topless with esophagus, heart, and lungs of a goat in her hand.

Camera
Michael Luger
Sound Recording
Matthias Leihs
Post production
Simon Brugner

Ruprechtskirche

www.ruprechtskirche.at

Ruprechtskirche (Church of St. Ruprecht) is dedicated to the patron saint of the salt merchants of Vienna, Saint Rupert of Salzburg, and is generally considered to be the oldest church in Vienna. Even though there occured some debates which church has the oldest foundations in Vienna as discoveries of very old building substance under the Peterskirche and of old graves under the Stephansdom have been made, Ruprechtskirche has the certainity of the label ‘among the oldest’. Also the date of its foundation is not totally assured. Companions of Rupert, Cunald and Gisalrich have – according to a legend – laid the foundation for the church in 740. However, it is more plausible that is was founded between 796 and 829 when Salzburg played a strong role in the religious discourse in Vienna. Ruprechtskirche is situated on one of the oldest parts of the city, the Roman Vindobona, a former military camp with an attached civilan city on the banks of the Danube. Just around the corner of the church you can find the Marc-Aurelstraße that has its name from the Roman emperor Marc Aurelius, who used Vindobona as his headquarter during the Marcomannic Wars and died here – as transmitted from the historian Aurelius Victor – in 180. The only Romanic ecclesisastical building in town has experienced many alterations and damages in time. It was affected by heavy fires in its sorroundings in 1276 and again by shellfire during World War II. Only marginally decorated, but covered with ivy this small church with its wooden roof has kept its distinctive basic and soulful character. Maybe not as striking as the lot of Vienna’s pompous sacral buildings, Ruprechtkirche has in its elementariness as ‘the oldest church of Vienna’ a lot to tell about local history. On the frontside of the church you can find a stone-statue of St. Ruprecht, a bit hidden behind a bush and partly overgrown with moss, holding a salt-barrell in his left arm.