Concert movies are a documentary staple, from classics like
Woodstock and The Last Waltz to modern
takes like Justin Timberlake and the Tennessee Kids. They
provide a contained narrative window that can service various other storylines.
And there’s usually killer music. Joe LaMattina’s Memphis
‘69 fits solidly in this tradition, and is a must-see for fans of
Tennessee blues and soul, though it also has more on its mind.
The Memphis County Blues Festival started in 1966, and the
1969 installment is notable for a number of reasons. First, it marked the
city’s 150th anniversary. It also occurred the year after Martin Luther King
was assassinated in Memphis—a fact never directly addressed in the film, though
the beginning scrawl points out that the Overton Park Band Shell, the venue for
this concert whose primary goal was to bring people together, also played host
to KKK rallies.
LaMattina and his wife, Lisa, with the help of Fat Possum
Records, unearthed footage of the three-day event taken by Gene Rosenthal and a
small crew. They shot 40,000 feet of footage, and the result is an upfront,
intimate look at the festival. The warm, crackling images have remained largely
unseen for five decades and boast performances by Rufus Thomas and the
Bar-Kays, Bukka White, Lum Guffin, Furry Lewis, and many more—including the
blind, 106-year-old bluesman Nathan Beauregard. They may not be the big
household names everyone know, but they represent the history of blues and soul
in the region. The film also features more contemporary, more rock-oriented
artists, like Johnny Winter and Moloch.
First and foremost, Memphis ‘69 is a
concert movie, and the music forms the centerpiece. At the same time, it also
offers a time capsule glimpse, at the city, the population, and generational
and racial divides. By and large, the black artists are all older, and all men,
guys who have been at this for years and years. Their music has a raw,
visceral, lived-in feel—it’s rough to the touch, textured, and carries and
oomph that palms you on the chest.
On the other hand, the white artists are all younger and
hipper and there are a handful of women—think hippies, or hippie-adjacent.
Musically, they’re more polished and slick—what they’re selling feels more like
a product, something honed and learned in music classes rather than in clubs
and on stages. They have the chops and hit all the right notes, but they
largely lack the edge and weight and power of the older performers. They also proudly
wave a countercultural flag—one act openly decries the Vietnam War, another
contextual reminder of the times.
It’s not a clash of worlds or ages necessarily. Both groups
are obviously pleased to be part of this—the older artists are happy to share
with a new generation and audience, while the younger performers have an
obvious reverence for those who came before. The great music forms the center
of Memphis ‘69, and is what makes it worth watching, but
this juxtaposition and larger cultural context offers additional depth and
makes it somewhat more than a cool, overlooked moment in time.
[Grade: B-]
I've been dying to watch this. any tips on where I can find it?
ReplyDeleteSadly, I don't know. I haven't been able to find any real release information for it. Which is a bummer, because I think lots of folks would be into it.
ReplyDelete