Martin Scorsese Presents The Blues - A Musical Journey
It may have been underrated when first broadcast on PBS on consecutive nights in the fall of '03, but executive producer Martin Scorsese's homage to the blues is a truly significant, if imperfect, achievement. "Musical journey" is an apt description, as Scorsese and the six other directors responsible for these seven approximately 90-minute films follow the blues--the foundation of jazz, soul, R&B, and rock & roll--from its African roots to its Mississippi Delta origins, up the river to Memphis and Chicago, then to New York, the United Kingdom, and beyond. Some of the films (like Wim Wenders's The Soul of a Man and Charles Burnett's Warming by the Devil's Fire) use extensive fictional film sequences, generally to good effect. There's also plenty of documentary footage, interviews, and contemporary studio performances recorded especially for these films.
Member Reviews
Disappointing - anik
In my opinion, a music documentary should add to our understanding of the music or somehow bring us into the world of the musician... but I kept having the feeling while watching these 7 installments that I would be learning more by turning off the TV and listening to some blues CDs. While there are some good archival clips of musicians performing in their heyday, the focus of these shows is interviews (often quite unenlighetening) and modern studio sessions. I guess the approach was to present the blues as something living and still relevent, not embalmed and put on display.
I suspect they could have made a decent 4-hour production out of it if they'd stuck to one director, one unified approach, and edited out all the sub-standard bits. The Clint Eastwood-directed Piano Blues, for instance, has Ray Charles, well past his prime, repeating himself, fumbling around the piano. Clint himself is in the frame half the time - this is not what I expect to see in a blues documentary!
I hesitate to recommend it, but on the other hand there are worthwhile fragments here and there in all the shows - you just have to wade through the frustrating bits to find them.
Member Reviews
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Disappointing - anik
In my opinion, a music documentary should add to our understanding of the music or somehow bring us into the world of the musician... but I kept having the feeling while watching these 7 installments that I would be learning more by turning off the TV and ...