SOUND ♫ TRACK
music n’ movies, music in movies
Standing In the Shadows Of Motown (2002)
Don’t forget the
The
world has finally caught up with the Funk Brothers, the studio musicians behind
a hundred and one Motown hits,
“The Sound of Young America” in the early 1960s, the songs before only credited
to the Four Tops, the Miracles, the Temptations, the Supremes…
As the label founder, he may have turned
out to be a weasel (moving the entire
operation to L.A.
without notifying the people he didn’t care to have follow) but Berry Gordy was a genius in assembling his
personnel. The Funk Brothers were never a group per se but out of dozens of
musicians there were a few anchors: James Jamerson (bass), Joe Hunter & Earl
Van Dyke (keys), Pistol Allen, Bennie Benjamin & Uriel Jones (drums), Bongo
Brown (percussion) and Joe Messina & Bob Babbitt (guitar). These guys were as
essential to their company sound as Atlantic
Records’ Muscle Shoals Wrecking Crew or Stax’s
Mar-Keys and Booker T & the MGs.
The Funks had to follow studio
arrangements, of course but these were loose, allowing them to incorporate
their own ideas consistently. Unbeatable in
combination with the songwriting of Smokey Robinson, Norman Whitfield
and the incomparable Holland/ Dozier/ Holland; with the voices of David Ruffin, Otis
& Paul Williams & Melvin Franklin (the Tempts), the punchy soul of
Gladys Knight (the Pips), the purring control of Mary Wells, the dramatic Levi
Stubbs (the ‘Tops) and sweet-voiced Smokey himself (the Miracles).
Some
black folk thought Motown (Hitsville USA) was too slick compared to Stax (Soulsville USA) and the gritty
soul of Otis Redding or Wilson “the Wicked” Pickett-- and they were right; but
never before had so many from-the-ghetto
groups topped the white-dominated pop charts all at the same time.
Motown
execs wisely demo’ed the songs through tinny transistor radio and
factory-install car speakers to hear them like the record-buying kids would hear
them. It paid off big time. This movie is
another matter. Part documentary, part reenactment (the lamest parts of the movie by far) and part reunion
concert, its uneven as hell. If not for
the subject matter, no one would have given the rave reviews its garnered. The
reenactments were throwaway moments in the story and served no
purpose, while the MLK Freedom March shots have been done to death; no justice
or new revelation was done to either here.
I
couldn’t just stand up and dance in the middle of the theater but considered
it; even so, the reunion footage got my feet tapping although the singers
ranged from good to fair to dreadful. At
the top was (believe it or not) Joan
Osborne with the hottest cover ever of What Becomes of the Broken Hearted. Marvin-wannabe Ben Harper was horrid &
wan and M’chelle Ngodosho should’ve been booted into the street for fucking up
--oh, excuse me -- interpreting the
vocal phrasings in such an off-the- mark way. It might work legitimately with
other arrangements but it didn’t work
with the classic Motown. As a singer, funk-legend bassist Bootsy
Collins was notably un-good but so what--say
yeah! its Bootsy!
Chaka
Khan was just ok but too bad no one approached she’s-still-got-it Patti LaBelle
who would’ve nailed them all perfectly. Even worse, apparently no one asked
Martha Reeves who was in the damn movie and even expressed her wish to rejoin
the Brothers on stage sometime!
Somebody’s head ought to roll for that one.
Most
importantly, though, here the Funks finally got the chance to show off their
jazz chops. They weren’t pop guys, they weren’t rock and rollers but most of
them were brought up on corn bread, beans, blues and boogie in the south. This
background was key to what they brought to Motown
and what made the music so distinct.
Two
years after seeing in on the screen I found the saving grace for this doc in
the DVD edition and it is solid gold: three jam sessions with the reunited
Funks in the studio, beautiful pieces of jazz n’ soul with no vocalists to get
in the way played by musicians who know where each other is gonna riff before
they do it.
In execution, I’d vote this one of the least
worst documentaries ever made but at least the Funk Brothers story has finally been told.
Too bad the film makers don’t understand the vernacular.
Groove (2000)
Forget this one on your home screen but
in the theater, it sucks you into the techno groove and makes you wonder why
you’re not out eating Ecstasy and getting your thing on with a young & cute
candy-raver.
Run Lola Run (1999)
The first movie to effectively use
techno on a soundtrack, Run Lola Run was also lauded as the picture
that was going to revolutionize film-making, ushering in an era of interactive
flicks with multiple endings to choose from, echoing the video-game experience. Thank god it hasn’t come to pass.
Is that really what the art form needs,
an audience of guys who spend their free time in virtual worlds of killing
sprees and grand theft auto? When travesties like Terminal Velocity and American Pie pull in the crowds do you
honestly think anyone from those audiences could make an intelligent or thoughtful
choice of endings or plot threads? Everything would either end in orgies or
bloodbaths--most likely both
simultaneously. Or their equally insipid girlfriends would drag & drog
Viggo Mortensen into The Wedding Planner. Its
bad enough to have DVD releases restoring outtakes that lead nowhere, drop the
pace of the film dead in its tracks or show off the indulgence of vanity
“director’s cuts”. Restoring films like Welles’ Touch of Evil to their proper and coherent form makes sense; even having
a chance to see Michael Cimino’s indulgently beautiful Heaven’s Gate is alright but no one (no one!)
needs to see Ashton Kuchter in the long version of Just Married.
It is good that the “future of film”
that Lola was supposed to inspire hasn’t
happened…yet. It does however stand as one of the few modern movies where the
score was integral and integrated beautifully. Run Lola
Run was also one of the last (if not the last) whose
soundtrack album was actually music from the film and not old & tired classic
hits tied in with the marketing department of the record label that the studio
also owns.
Kill Bill (2004)
Quentin Tarantino is a derivative hack
who would best serve the film world by quietly going back to where he came
from: behind the counter in some video
store. This because he knows good cinema
when he sees it; he just can’t create it.
Waiting for the cameo appearance of
Japanese girl garage band the 5.6.7.8.s was the only thing that kept me from
walking out of the piece of junk that was Kill Bill.
The 5.6.7.8.s are also derivative but have class in a trashy way and unlike
Tarantino hold no pretension in what they do.
the Man With the Golden Arm (1955)
Card games and curvy dames. Dirty
dealing and a dope addict drummer tryin’ to kick, all to a jazz beat by Elmer
Bernstein. Not a great movie but mid-50s Hollywood ’s
idea of underbelly reality. Overacted by everyone including the Oscar-Nominated
(huh?) Frank Sinatra, the wooden but hubba-hubba looker Kim Novak and fakin’-it
cripple Eleanor Parker. Still I watch it
anyway just to see two-time loser Frankie Machine battle his need for a fix and
ambition for drum sticks. Although Billy Wilder’s 1945 The Lost Weekend is the mother of all cold-turkey
movies, this flick is more enjoyable than it ought to be. Maybe because 1955
censors wouldn’t allow all the puking and shitting-your-pants that goes along
with kicking the habit.
flyer for the show. one dollar. one dollar!!! |
Wattstax (1973)
This documentary is from a time when
niggers were badass instead of today’s chickenshit gangstaz. It’s on-the-streets
commentary and a concert to commemorate the 1965 Watts riots (or Watts uprising,
depending on which side you’re on). Among many Stax/Volt artists it features Isaac “the
Black Moses” Hayes; the funky, funky Bar-Kays;
the styling Dramatics; a searing sexy performance by the overlooked and under-rated pre-disco Johnnie Taylor; and the daddy of ‘em all Mr Rufus Thomas and daughter Carla,
all from when the Soul was stacked as
high as the ‘fro on a brother’s head. Fuck Tupac. Can you say “dignity”? It’s
all up in here. Even young Richard Pryor is looking good!
Besides being a landmark concert event, (a crowd of 90,000 black faces in the LA Coliseum including all roadies, security and support personnel? you bet it scared the crap out of the honky city fathers!), this is one of the first and finest music documentaries, leaving every other contemporary one --
the
Mayor of Sunset Strip (2004)
Rodney “Rodney on the ROQ” Bingenheimer has hung with everyone from the
Monkees and Sonny & Cher, through Bowie and LA rock impresario &
predator Kim Fowley, all the way up to No Doubt and Coldplay. In other words,
he’s been on the music scene of everything (commercially) happenin’ since about
1965. The first to spin on air among others, the Ramones and Blondie (and yes Coldplay, and No Doubt),
Rodney’s been on the scene with an uncanny knack of “breaking” bands and
knowing who’s gonna be important in music show biz, like playing Oasis on
cassette before anyone stateside ever heard the yobs.
And its all been for the love of the
music. Once a mainstay of KROQ (which now
specializes in nu-metal proto-rave; sadly nobody gives a shit anymore when
Brian Wilson is the on-air guest), the man’s been demoted to be a
once-a-week graveyard two-hour show, drives his mom’s old Chevy Nova and lives
in a modest (crappy) suburban house; he didn’t make no fortune for loving and
promoting the rock. True, at home, he’s surrounded by piles of memorabilia like
Beatles gold records and Elvis’ driver’s license that’s worth mega-bucks but
this stuff won’t hit the collector market until Rodney’s stone cold in his
grave.
This excellent film makes him out to be
a sad & pathetic overlooked, lonely little man --which he is--but c’mon:
he’s been places done things with people the average star-struck bastard can
only dream about as well as having more than his share of young and supple nubiles.
Monkee Davey Jones’ stand-in? The owner of Rodney’s English Disco where Bowie
and Iggy hobnobbed? The subject of more than one rocknroll song? Bingenheimer
might be a geeky music fan but in all, he isn’t doing so bad at all.
Ortho Tri-Cyclen Lo, tv commercial (2004)
This one impresses the hell out of me.
Christian “rockers” Sixpence None the Richer license their year 2000 hit There She Goes to a birth control
commercial? Outstanding! A band that was actually adequate
alt.rock ten years ago (check their 1995
release This Beautiful Mess), Sixpence
made it big on the Christian Rock circuit but can still think for themselves.
It’s a turn of events that just has to be giving Born-Again’s epileptic fits.For that, I truly praise Jesus.
this is not a poster but a lobby card. back in ancient times, a multitude of these (on heavy card stock) were distro'ed to theatres which would display them behind glass frames in the (duh) lobby. |
Hard Day’s Night (1964)
Musically and cinematically, Elvis
Presley immediately became history when this film hit the screen. Originally
conceived as a throwaway by United Artists who only wanted the movie to cash in
on a soundtrack LP, it was the picture’s and the Beatles’ good fortune that
director Richard Lester was picked for the project. The Fab Four didn’t give a
toss about his oeuvre but were impressed by his early association with Spike Milligan and The Goons (an inspiration to all of Monty Python)
and which lent a goofy flavor to Hard Day’s Night.
Written off as fluff by conservative
anti-Beatle ranks and over-shadowed by teen Beatlemania, most viewers at the
time failed to notice the sharp black and white compositions (UA didn’t want to spring for costly color on
a ”fad” flick) and inventive camerawork that made up for the money Lester
didn’t have to spend.
It still stands up today, capturing the
giddiness of the period and forever establishing each Beatle character: Ringo
loveable and gullible, John wise & witty etc. For the most part, the music
was worked into the script --the band rehearsing and playing the climactic show
or a song’s theme echoing the onscreen mood.
Too bad the 1965 follow-up Help! was allowed a bigger budget since now that
the Fab Four was big business, it also hobbled Lester who turned in a piece of
junk, more like what Beatle detractors thought Hard
Day’s Night would be. Help! spawned
the Pre-Fab Four--the Monkees-- to cash in on the “loveable lads in
goofy adventures” thing. At
least it gave Texan Michael Nesmith (y’know,
the Monkee with the hat?) a chance to sneak in a few overlooked and
under-rated country-flavor bubblegum classics like The Kind of Girl I Could Love and You Just May Be the One.
the End of The Century: the story of the ramones (2004)
OneTwoThreeFour! Not only the best
Ramones doc ever made but a good film as
well: smart, sharp, crisp, well constructed and a decent amount of footage of
“da brudders” that you haven’t seen much, if at all. Sadly the most recent
interviews were done after Joey blitzkrieg bopped but, timely, before Johnny
and Dee Dee did likewise. Tommy gets a fair amount of play as well, the most
level-headed Ramone of all (one out of six isn’t so bad I guess). You’ll cheer,
you’ll boo and hiss, you may even cry
but you’ll surely be smiling as well as laughing along with--okay, let’s
get real--laughing at poor ol’ Dee Dee.
West
Side Story (1961)
This one may seem quaint by today’s
standards but in 1961, the idea of a color Hollywood
musical filmed on location in the streets of New York City sans flashy costumes was like a
slap across the face, a wake-up to the possibilities of cinema that the
majority of television-obsessed 1950s America had forgotten all about.
Director Robert Wise and choreographer Jerome Robbins turned a hit melodramatic
Broadway play into a uh melodramatic movie complete with Leonard Bernstein’s
jazzy score and Stephen Sondheim’s jarring-for-the-time lyrics. Its all about
the context at the time of its release and the industry responded by honoring
crew & cast with a sweep at the
Oscars, including the sassy and hot Rita Moreno.
It feels and reads very much like the
stage but the musical numbers bring it alive without a trace of camp or
novelty. Watch this one through the eyes of its time & place, try not to
let the sappy love song numbers bother you and you’ll soon be slipping down the
mean streets, snapping your fingers and whistling When you’re a Jet.
DOA
(1981)
The disastrous Sex Pistols USA tour
interspersed with clips of pub-punters Sham 69, a still-worthy Generation X
before Billy Idol believed his name, the under-rated pre-Pere Ubu band the Dead Boys and the band that
mystified most punkers even then (saxophone?!)
the great X-Ray Spex. Music as raw and as fucked up as the footage of Sid
nodding off while sod-girl Nancy
tries to revive him for an interview. This
was the period when punk rock truly deserved its name. Watch this movie long
enough and you’ll be gobbing at the screen.
Tributary
(2000)
Personally I think you have to be an
idiot to enjoy tribute bands (I never
wanted to see the real Sabbath, Priest, Yes or Kiss in the fucking first place)
but even worse are the musicians with failed careers who justify their
existence in mistaking the fans’ misplaced worship for appreciation of their
own miserable talent. This is one of the rare times I’d rather see a musician
making Subway sandwiches for a living than getting paid for prolonging this
sort of drivel. The real head-scratcher here is the Guided By Voices tribute
band. For god-sakes, guys, let Robert Pollard drink himself to death in peace!
i always wondered who responded to these ads. when the cover story in the comic book involved,say, giant gorillas with green kryptonite vision, you had to wonder about the audience. |
Off
the Charts (2002)
When I was a child there used to be ads
in the back of comic books promising to Set
Your Poems To Music! with the implication that stardom --or at least
royalty checks --were yours to be had and all for a low, low fee. Of course
dumb little kids aren’t expected to know any better --we were the fifth-graders
mailing in four quarters taped to a piece of cardboard for a pair of X-Ray Specs
and, no, we didn’t care about any of that “see your skeleton” jazz but classmate
Paul ine Duddy’s sprouting tits. The Spex usually never arrived anyway but
when they did, they didn’t work. We got rooked!
Yup, we were taken in, just as countless
adults who ought to know better (probably
even some that we had to obey!) paid
upwards of fifty bucks to have a 45 single cut of their godawful “poetry” by a
(ha-ha) vocalist and (ha-ha-ha) band who cranked out hundreds
of these things, sometimes dozens in a few hours.
There’s interviews with collectors of
these wretched mementos (I’m glad
somebody’s keeping these for pop culture posterity but thank god it ain’t me)
as well as the musicians and promoters who aren’t so stupid as to pretend they
were actually doing anyone any favors. But flat-out pathetic are the characters
who had their “songs” recorded and are actually pleased with the results. One
or two of them are uh shall we say playing their 33’s at 16 RPM but most seem
like ordinary folks, proving once again that ordinary folks are the ones you really have to watch out for.In any
case, these clowns got what they deserved. Me too I guess but damn I sure wish
those spex had really worked…
Royal
Caribbean Lines tv commercial (2004)
Whatever Gen-X ad-exec thought to use
the Iggy Pop/David Bowie written Lust For Life on this commercial had to
know what he was doing but a song (edited of course) with lyrics about sleeping on the sidewalk and liquor and drugs for a Disneyesque
family fun on a cruise ship? Its simply a mind-fuck, especially for the people
who’ve never heard the entire song.
American Dreams (2004, tv series)
Dick Clark--the teenager that wouldn’t
die--is behind this shallow-minded series. The background for the
one-dimensional events that befall a “typical” American family is his show American Bandstand where two high school girls, best
friends, dance each week, solving problems like integration, police brutality
and Viet Nam
while gyrating to the latest hits. The weekly casting of the musicians is
horrendous: Leeann Rimes as Connie Francis, Duncan Sheik as Bobby Darrin, HilaryDuff as the Shangri-La’s Mary Weiss and most insulting, Macy Gray as the First
Lady of Stax, Carla Thomas. Liz Phair as Jackie DeShannon was mildly
acceptable.
Its an awful show but one guaranteed an
audience of my fellow baby-boomers who (due
to constant rehashing in the media) believe that we were all personally
present at every generation-defining event: King, Kennedy and Kent State .
And all boomers too believe that they watched Bandstand
weekly without fail. Me, sure I watched it some but was much more enamored of Where The Action Is, hosted by Paul Revere and the
Raiders who created more goofy excitement in their silly costumes than anemic
and lackluster Dick Clark could even if he were passing out one-hundred dollar
bills. If there was any justice in the world in those days, Clark
would’ve been the one assassinated instead of JFK.
the
Life Aquatic (2004) submitted by Marvel Girl
As somebody
who believes the words “David Bowie” to be synonymous with “wimpy crap” I found
myself slightly disappointed that this masterpiece of a movie consisted of a
mostly Bowie-based soundtrack. The
Portuguese renderings of the songs, however, made them more beautiful. And the point at which our protagonist takes
back his dignity and power is highlighted by a transition from Bowie to the Stooges- pure genius, raw power.
Hail!
Hail! Rock and Roll! (1998) contributed by Obenjyo
I thought that when I was going to write
for this I would be doing Magical Mystery Tour,
but as John Lennon says in the opening of Hail! Hail! " If you were to try to give rock 'n' roll another name you might call it
Chuck Berry”. Right. In the 1950's a whole generation worshipped his music
and when you see him perform today, past and present all come together. The
message is hail! hail! rock 'n' roll, right on! So I changed my mind
after seeing this one. Lennon says it all and this tape proves it. And I feel
it needed to be, while everyone has been jacking off to the Hives, the White
Stripes, Nirvana, the Clash, the Pistols, Sabbath, the Stones, Dylan, or
even the Beatles, it is unfortunate that Chuck Berry is left out.
This documentary was made in '88, the
cover box and the intro commercial for the film and soundtrack made me dread
wasting two hours of my life. I really hate when people try to translate other
decades into their own time, via film, t.v., music or art. It almost always
comes out wrong. Also in the film Berry
is 60, so general wisdom suggests that he is going to be old and tired.
Passable at best. Well it's quite the opposite. All the music is performed live
and Berry is
still, remarkably, a bad ass. The man is limber and still has great moves. He
plays great, sharp and articulate. Even when he screws up his power
carries him. I would even say his personality is regal in comparison to his
reputation. Which Berry
will not allow his "past" into the film, which tries to creep
in. A strange character as Keith Richards points out that the more you
know about him the less you know.
Guest interviews include Roy Orbison,
Everly Bros., Jerry Lee Lewis, Eric Clapton, Lennon, Willie Dixon, and Berry 's family.
Interesting conversations between Berry ,
Little Richard, and Bo Diddley. And a great story by, of all people, Bruce
Springsteen. Also Johnny Johnson who was Berry 's
original piano man, is also interviewed and apparently it is suggested that he
and Berry
have not played together for 20 years until '88. Somehow Keith Richards arranged this, the film, and the show
finale which is an all star performance.
Although I prefer the more intimate performances
at the beginning of the film, it's a good tribute. No updating Berry for the 80's and
the guest performers are respectful. No showboating. Berry is the star and the King of rock 'n'
roll. If you haven't seen this film it will change how you look at Chuck Berry.
Cocksucker Blues (1972)
Pretty crappy as film and barely even
home-movie quality --or maybe it was the print of this hard-to-find, multiple-generation-duped
flick? But its worthy of a screening nonetheless, being mostly the Rolling Stones
fucking around behind and off-stage on tour at a crucial moment in their
never-ending career : post-Gimme Shelter (their finest hour if you ask me) but
just after Exile On Main Street (their last hurrah, also if you ask me).
As expected, there’s plenty of sex and
drugs in addition to the rock and the roll (and
not just a little nodding out). While there’s footage of people shooting
& snorting dope, film-maker Robert Frank was smart enough to edit out any
actual footage of the Stones themselves breaking the law. Don’t forget, just a
few years previous Scotland Yard’s Detective Sergeant Norman Pilcher (immortalized as “Semolina Pilcher” in John
Lennon’s I Am the Walrus) was making a name for himself by drug-busting
various Beatles and Stones as well as Donovan and Marianne Faithful.
There’s a few scenes of groupies and
various hangers-on getting fucked up -- and just plain fucked: its more than a
little disturbing to watch a girl on a private jet not quite willingly stripped
and screwed by some guy while the “lads” play bongos and cheer him on.
This movie is all that rock n’ roll
decadence you’ve heard so much about all these years. But its also the just
plain boring moments between what is likely Mick and Keith ’s
ultimate high: onstage in front of
thousands of people going crazy for the traveling Jagger-Richards
self-indulgence show.
Josie and the Pussycats (2001)
It seemed like
a good idea, to make a life-action (va-va-voom!)
version of Archie Comics’ spin-off
Josie and the Pussycats. The
first mistake though was updating the pre-fab bubblegum soul of the original
cartoon series -- of course this was to be expected.
But updating
the Pussycats to an alt.rock sound in 2001 was more than a few years too late (even though someone had the sense to get
Kaye Hanley of short-lived alterntive rock phenoms Letters To Cleo as the
songwriter/vocals for Josie). And worst of all (or maybe this is a sad comment about me) the comic books Pussycats
are way hotter than Rachel Leigh
Cook, Tara Reid or Rosario Dawson.
The
Saddest Music in the World (2003)
Art design somewhere between Weine’s The Cabinet of Dr Caligari and Lang’s Metropolis, like Kenneth Anger remaking
Eisenstein’s Potemkin on the same film stock used for Griffith’s Way Down East and pushing the f-stop as far as
it will go in either direction, this is not-quite a musical. A global variety
of musicians compete for a $25,000 grand prize in Depression-era Winnipeg to make the
saddest music in the world. Full to the brim of a beer stein with racial
stereotypes, lust, betrayal, lager bathing and the wonderful Isabella
Rossellini supported by a great performance by Mark McKinney. Words fail. The
music mystifies. The images skew.
Capital One credit cards tv commercial
Not only is it
an insult to the great Isley Brothers to use their 1962 Nobody But Me for a lowly credit card ad but an insult as well to
the chart-topping 1967 cover by party-rockers the Human Beinz. Even moreso
since the promo spot features dickhead twerp David Spade.
Leadbelly (1976)
About
three-quarters of way through this life story of the noted folksinger Hudie
Ledbetter (always misclassified as a bluesman), I realized it was no ordinary
skim-the-surface rags-to-riches story (or in Leadbelly’s case, rags-to-better-rags).
Director
Gordon Parks is more interested in details and mood. For example, when
Leadbelly escapes the chain gang, the chase lasts for a good twenty minutes.
Any other Hollywood biopic would have done
with it in five, just another stop along the way to the obligatory fame and
acclaim. Parks dispenses with Leadbelly’s own actual happy ending, finally
recognized as a international treasure, awarded his own 1940s radio show and
influencing the likes of Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger who in turn helped usher
in the 1960s folk revival (by the grace of God, Leadbelly died in 1948 long
before he could witness the gutless and anemic Kingston Trio became the USA’s
most popular folksingers).
Hard living,
hard-fighting, hard-drinking, hard-fucking, Hudie Ledbetter was not a saintly
man, having been convicted of (and serving time for) killings, stabbings and
carrying weapons no less than four times. Parks concentrates on Leadbelly
leaving his Louisiana
home at age 16 into his third prison term in his late forties.
Nothing fancy
as cinema, it remains mostly quick-paced in spite of the two full hour running time. The
performances however were a trifle disturbing. Maybe its just residual of my
white liberal upbringing ( read : uneasy guilt) but the entire cast seemed
guilty of tomming, cooning and plenty of Buckwheat-isms, ala the eyepopping
1930-40s black actors Stepin Fetchit and Mantan Moreland. Even that dreadful TV
show In Living Color’s Homie the
Clown has more dignity than this film’s characterization of lesser known but
equally great blues legend Blind Lemon Jefferson (who posthumously lent his
name to a San Francisco
rock group first known as Blind Jefferson Airplane).
And speaking
of blues legends, an early scene showed Ledbetter in a barroom playing with a
kid blowing harp. In the final credits my astute ears were rewarded (thank you
very much) by the confirmation that the actual riffs were indeed played by
Sonny Terry, the Jimi Hendrix of the blues harmonica, ten years before his
death at age 75.
Since all of
Ledbetter’s catalogue was recorded on 78 rpm shellac, a studio musician was
used instead since the quality wouldn’t have matched a modern theatre sound
system. But as one who was buying Leadbelly records when I was 14, I couldn’t
help being disappointed in not hearing the originals.1980’s Coal Miner’s Daughter is the only
musical biopic where the soundtrack voice (Sissy Spacek) matched and at times
outdid the subject’s (Loretta Lynn).
Faults or not,
this film is rarely seen and deserves wider revivals.
Rock &
Roll (1995)
I’ve watched and re-watched (and re-re-watched)
this legendary five part doc (BBC and Boston’s WGBH) on poorly taped VHS
cassettes I made when it originally aired on PBS . Despite clocking in at ten
hours it’s a populist history , giving short shrift (if any shrift at all) to
obsessed fan favorites ( what do you mean there was no room for The
Rezillos?! ). However it remains the best rock history ever filmed.
Never commercially available, it can be viewed online and in vaguely acceptable qualitybootlegs.
DO NOT confuse this with Time-Life's similar five part series, The History of Rock 'n' Roll (2004) unless you want to hear the pontificating Bono and other what-the-hell-is-he-doing-here commentators offering useless “insight”.
DO NOT confuse this with Time-Life's similar five part series, The History of Rock 'n' Roll (2004) unless you want to hear the pontificating Bono and other what-the-hell-is-he-doing-here commentators offering useless “insight”.
Like
a bad movie sequel, SoundTrack #2 is even worse than #1 and took three years to
complete. It was hardly worth the wait…
Sound♫Track #2, May 2005 is a member of the WigWamBam family of hack publications and may
be found anywhere I choose to leave it whenever I damn well feel like writing
an issue.
Respectfully and appreciatively
dedicated to
Keif and Peter (the punks of cinematic appreciation!)
where I saw almost half of the movies dissected here
and to
Pumpernick Eggburger & staff at the long-defunct Elgin Cinema
(Eighth Avenue, Chelsea, NYC, NY) where I spent many a teen-age hour and many days on end watching the month-long Buster Keaton revival, the all-night Kurosawa /samurai festival. Sex! (Roger Vadim’s Barbarella; my first onscreen popshot (In the Realm of the Senses); adventure! (the original Zatoichi the Blind Swordsman series) and everything else from John Ford to El Topo where one might rub elbows with William K Everson ( author and NYU film prof), and dozing bums ( that's what we called homeless back then) all the while possibly inhaling second hand marijuana smoke.