African American
Related: About this forumRumble The Indians Who Rocked The World
There's a lot of excellent history in this documentary's study of the birth of the blues, jazz and rock. I was hard pressed to find a promotional video that did not skim over or outright remove the importance of African-ness in the creation of American music that the movie reveals. Yet still, I couldn't understand my small dissatisfaction with the film but Jack Hamilton, Slates pop critic and assistant professor of American studies and media studies at the University of Virginia, nailed it for me.
Patton discussed below is "Delta blues pioneer Charley Patton, whose grandmother was thought to be Cherokee, is quite simply one of the most important musicians of the 20th century and probably worthy of at least a hundred such films."
"The film doesn't mention the prominence of such musical characteristics in West African traditions, nor does it mention Pattons well-established influences and mentors such as Henry Sloan and Willie Brown, both of whom were black. Neglecting this context runs the risk of suggesting that Pattons musical style was acquired through something like biological transmissionan old-fashioned notion, indeedas well as potentially muddying the still-charged question of whom the black American blues tradition rightly 'belongs' to.
Pattons segment also illustrates some of the films shortcomings, particularly its quixotic and quasi-musicological quest to uncover the Native American 'roots' of modern popular music. This type of sleuthing is always tricky and rarely all that satisfying, and the films lengthy theorization that the melismatic style of Pattons singing and the intricate rhythms of his guitar playing are direct retentions of his Cherokee ancestry feels flimsy at best. Melisma and polyrhythms are common to many musical traditions, including those of the black American South, where Patton spent his life as an itinerant musician under the constant threat of Jim Crowera racial violence."
The documentary connected a lot of dots for me and I loved it. You can view it on Amazon Prime.
https://slate.com/arts/2017/08/rumble-the-doc-about-indians-and-rock-reviewed.html
serbbral
(269 posts)Thanks for this link. I never thought about this.
Kind of Blue
(8,709 posts)Our truths are so much more exciting and I think lends so much to healing ourselves and within and among communities.