
(the following article contains links to information
about the participating directors from the press kit
for The Blues; courtesy of ROADMOVIES and
CLEAR BLUE SKY PRODUCTIONS.)
------------------
LA Times, Feb.17th 2002
COVER STORY
.
By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN
VICKSBURG, Miss. -- When "The
Blues" production crew rolled into town, the workers must have
smacked their hands together. They didn't need to scrape the paint
off any houses. They didn't need to pull down any fences. They didn't
have to sprinkle idle old men along the road. All was there. Vicksburg
was behaving beautifully.
Here in one of the city's
most unchanging neighborhoods was a bona-fide blues scene aching
to be filmed. At a busted-window joint called Slippers, the sound
of an art form being revived leaked through a screen door. "Mama
said I was goin' to be in a movie, yeah, Mama
said I was goin' to be a star," one man sang in the slanting
doorway. "And she shooooo' was right!" "Dancers!
Dancers!" one of the assistants yelled past him. "Come
on, let's get this shoot done!" "The Blues"
is a gutsy PBS series in the works, dreamed up by Martin
Scorsese, that strives to deposit a little grit on the screen
and, in a way, spice up drama with real
life.
Part documentary, part not, it's six separate
films, each crafted by a different director, tracing the evolution
of the blues and how the music has helped express--and shape--the
black experience. Scorsese is directing one installment, as are
Wim Wenders and Mike
Figgis, among others. The series is scheduled to air in fall
2003. "We made a conscious decision early on that this was
not going to be an encyclopedic approach to the blues," said
series producer Alex Gibney, whose credits include the documentaries
"The Fifties" and "The Pacific Century." "Our
films are going to be personal and impressionistic. We thought this
would be the best agent provocateur to turn people on to the music."
No, this won't be like Ken Burns' "Jazz"
odyssey, the 10-episode musical examination that was scrupulously
researched but criticized as a little dry in places. "The Blues"
is conceived as a raw, experiential rendering of the music's history,
as frank and unvarnished as the musicians' sooty lives--but with
dramatic accents. Each segment features a mix of standard documentary
elements such as archival footage, performances and interviews,
along with dramatic reenactments. The twist is that the final product
will be a set of one-hour films, all with a deliberately indie feel
and not connected in any conventional miniseries fashion.
Blues experts say it's about time someone
stepped inside the real blues, the dirty blues, the folksy beats
of such places as Slippers.
"You got to get that camera into these
honky-tonks and juke joints and show people having a good time,"
said Albert Murray, the celebrated author of numerous essays and
books on black culture, including "Stomping the Blues."
"People like to hear Negroes lamenting, but they don't get
it. I never met a blues musician who wasn't looking for a good time,
a bottle of whiskey, and a woman and a guitar or a piano. You gonna
tell me that after working hard all day in the fields, people wanted
to go to a juke joint and hear sad music? No way!"
Scorsese, the executive producer and a blues
aficionado, said this project evolved from an Eric Clapton documentary
he was involved with. He encouraged each director to shoot as much
on location as possible and explore his relationship to the music.
The only parameters were to keep it to 60 minutes. "The idea
for the series is to do something a little different than what's
been done with other music documentaries," said Scorsese. "I
sought out directors with a love for the music and experience, in
both features and documentaries, who would make films that communicate
their passion for and their personal connection to the music."
Scorsese's own connection to music is deep
rooted. He who was an editor on "Woodstock" and directed
the Band's swan song, "The Last Waltz." "I came to
a deeper appreciation of the blues by way of rock 'n roll,"
said the director. "And when I did, I realized that it had
been the foundation for so much of what I had been listening to."
Musician Keb' Mo' (Kevin Moore), who has
been a leading practitioner of acoustic blues traditions in recent
years, has clear notions of what kind of message he'd want a series
of this sort to impart--and, surprisingly, he wouldn't want to see
much emphasis on the very traditions he honors. "For God's
sake, give it a blood transfusion," he says. "Don't give
it a bringing-back-a-dead-corpse-type attitude. Let's look at the
great-great-grandchildren, not overdo it with the dead great-grandfathers.
That's pertinent. You have to look at that.
"But tie it to current R&B artists--the
India.Aries, the D'Angelos. Talk to musicians that you wouldn't
expect. Don't look to me, for example. I'm 50 years old. Show how
it's really alive. Go to the churches. There will be some people
who really know the blues there--blues and gospel are so connected
to Southern culture, black and white." "The Blues"
is a "passion project" (read: low budget), and the financing
comes from Clear Blue Sky Productions, known for the documentary
series "Me & Isaac Newton," and Wenders' Road Movies.
Each episode is estimated to cost $1 million.
The series opens on the banks of the Niger
river in the west African country of Mali. Spike Lee had signed
on to film the first episode but pulled out because of a scheduling
conflict. Scorsese then agreed to step in,
even though he had to miss the shooting in Africa because he'd been
engrossed in the final stages of his film "Gangs of New York."
Lee's withdrawal was a disappointment for many reasons, Gibney said,
not in the least because it left the production with only one black
director: Charles Burnett.
"And that's not something we overlooked," Gibney said.
"We reached out to a number of black filmmakers. Unfortunately,
there were scheduling issues that kept them from working with us."
The first episode, "From Mali to Mississippi,"
traces the roots of blues music and the cross-currents between black
Africa and the baleful songs born on the cotton fields of the Deep
South. Many of west Africa's top musicians, such as Ali Farka Toure
and Salif Keita, say they were influenced by Delta blues, which
in the formative days were shaped by rhythms slaves learned in their
motherland of Africa. No music better reflects the times and lives
of its pioneering artists, recently freed slaves facing the ugly
world of Reconstruction. The blues began as a music of pain--in
its pure form, the music still is--of life in endless, hateful cotton
fields and hotblooded violence and being lonely and broke and black.
Inspired by field hollers and spirituals,
the blues developed a distinct call-and-response rhythm in which
the singer belts out a line and the guitar answers it. Often, the
first line is repeated. As one old ballad goes: "I'm going
to leave baby, ain't going to say goodbye, I'm going to leave baby,
ain't going to say goodbye. But I'll write you and tell you the
reason why."
The blues is pure oral tradition, one of
the best examples of unfiltered cultural expression, said Peter
Aschoff, a University of Mississippi anthropologist and blues expert.
"I tell my students this music knows a great deal about being
black," Aschoff said, "and that they need to listen."
W.C. Handy, a black composer, first heard these scratchy, folksy
sounds in 1903 while waiting for a train in Tutwiler, Miss. When
he put them down on paper, he marked the birth of popular blues
music.
Director Burnett re-created this moment for
the series' second episode ("Warming by the Devil's Fire")
on a storming late December day in Vicksburg. He and his crew were
huddling under a caboose dripping with rain. The scene is a flashback
in the story of a young boy's first exposure to the blues. As soon
as Burnett saw a 50-car freight train steaming his way, he yelled:
"Let's go! Let's go! Let's get this!" and the crew scrambled
to squeeze off one take of the Handy scene with the wet, clattering
train in the background. Burnett is telling a story, his story,
about two warring uncles--one deeply religious, the other hooked
on the blues.
"Growing up," said Burnett, who
was born in this Mississippi river town, "there was always
this tension between gospel music, which is a big part of the Baptist
tradition, and the blues, which has all these dark, suggestive lyrics."
Burnett is something of a guerrilla filmmaker,
a 57-year-old Mississippi transplant who has spent most of his life
struggling to shoot films in South-Central Los Angeles, where he
lives. His first project was a family drama set in Watts. "Killer
of Sheep" (1977) took five years to make, partly because Burnett
had promised a role to a friend in prison, and the friend kept missing
parole. The film won an award at the Berlin International Film Festival,
putting Burnett on the map in Hollywood, and in 1990 it was included
in the National Film Registry by the National Film Preservation
Board. For his next film, he wrote and directed "To Sleep With
Anger" (1990), a subtle, tough story starring Danny Glover
as an enigmatic man from the Deep South who brings trouble along
when he visits his brother's family. The movie, with its references
to superstition and other folklore, is steeped in the blues.
The recent filming in Vicksburg was a homecoming
of sorts for Burnett, who still has family there. The busted-up
neighborhood hasn't changed much in the past 50 years ago, he said.
"But what blows me away is the genius and depth and the poetry
of these people," he said. "You sit there and look at
the environment they came from. It's stunning."
The third episode of "The Blues"
("Devil Got My Woman") is basically a road trip with Wenders,
the German feature director who recently explored the musical documentary
genre in "Buena Vista Social Club."
The next episodes trail the blues upriver,
showing such cotton-country musicians as B.B. King and Howlin' Wolf
making it in Memphis and Chicago and becoming commercial hits. Richard
Pearce, who worked with D.A. Pennebaker on the 1967 Bob Dylan
documentary "Don't Look Back," and whose feature films
have often explored racial themes, directs Episode 4, "Moaning
at Midnight." And Marc Levin,
director of "Slam," a gritty movie about urban poetry,
is helming the fifth episode, "Godfathers and Sons."
The sixth film is about British musicians
reacquainting Americans with the blues during the '60s, when rock
'n' roll was taking off and the blues were fading into obscurity.
Mike Figgis, director of "Leaving Las Vegas," is filming
this one. Blues experts say this is an opportune time to film this
project.
"We're seeing the passing of the last
great titans," said Robert Santelli, one of Scorsese's consultants
and the director of the Experience Music Project in Seattle. He
cited the recent deaths of Rufus Thomas and John Lee Hooker and
the advanced state of other greats such as King, who's 76. Unlike
country music, which succeeded in penetrating the mainstream and
getting radio play, the blues have never been destined for Top 40.
"But it still has a loyal following, and people are buying
the music," said David Sanjek, director of BMI Archives, a
performance licensing agency. "Though the pure form of the
music is endangered, young musicians are carrying on the tradition,
in their own ways."
Today's blues are spiced with funk and jazz
and bits of country, and features more instrumental soloing inspired
by rock, Sanjek said. Aschoff, the anthropologist and blues expert,
said he'd like to see "The Blues" capture this fluidity.
"You can't just put blues music in a museum and freeze it in
the 1940s," he said. "The music today is different--but
it's equally relevant to the black experience." But to Robert
Cray, one of the top figures in the current electric blues world,
the most important message the filmmakers can convey is to be found
in the history.
"Life was different [in the Delta of
the '20s and '30s]," he says. "That part needs to be told
in this series--how transient life was. People worked on the plantations
or as sharecroppers. They were like today's migrant workers, moving
from area to area. That played a big part with the bluesmen, following
the work and playing when they had the opportunity. It's going to
be great for more people to have the opportunity to learn about
this."
But this series, its makers insist, is not
really about history, but about something more essential. "The
story of the blues has been told," Santelli said. "But
what hasn't been told is the essence of the music and its power.
It's scary, scary music. And when this series comes out, some of
this stuff is going to blow people away."
Jeffrey Gettleman is
the Atlanta bureau chief for The Times.
Times researchers Edith Stanley and freelance writer Steve Hochman
contributed to this report.
for more on Wim's contribution
to 'the BLUES' see the
News Reel Oct. 2001
back to March 2002 News Reel
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