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A time-traveling mixtape that makes borders dissolve — one haunting song at a time.
TMDB
66

A Magical Substance Flows Into Me (2015)

archival archaeologyquietly radicalsonic time-travel

Overview

DocumentaryHistoryMusic

Robert Lachmann was a German-Jewish ethnomusicologist. In the 1930s, his radio show "Oriental Music" explored the musical traditions of Palestine and included regular live performances by musicians from different ethnic and religious groups. Inspired by Lachmann’s musicological studies, Palestinian artist Jumana Manna travels through Israel and the Palestinian territories of today with recordings from the programme. What do these songs sound like now when performed by Moroccan, Kurdish, or Yemenite Jews, by Samaritans, members of the urban and rural Palestinian communities, Bedouins and Coptic Christians?

Flag of PSPSArabic
Content warning
woman directorisraelpalestinian territoriesoriental musicrobert lachmannmusicological studiesjumana manna

Standout Aspects

Direction

Manna's patient, poetic excavation of contested sound

Sound

The original Lachmann recordings are ghostly time capsules

Editing

Seamless dialogue between 1930s archives and present-day performers

Best for:Solo: Headphones, late night, let it wash over you·Rewatch: Listen once, then again for what you missed
Heads up:Triggers: Explores displacement and occupation; emotional weight of historical loss
Jumana Manna

Director

Jumana Manna

ReleasedSep 17, 2015
Runtime1h 8m
StatusReleased

Vibe

Paceslow
Intensitymedium
Tonemixed
Feelheavy

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Deep Dive

Trivia, insights & behind the scenes

Trivia

Robert Lachmann's original radio broadcasts were recorded on fragile shellac discs; many were damaged or lost during WWII.

Cultural

Manna filmed in locations where some musicians cannot legally travel to hear each other perform — the edit becomes the only possible meeting space.

Gallery

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