Showing posts with label Blues. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blues. Show all posts

Friday, July 3, 2009

Music DVD Review: Billie Holiday -- The Life and Artistry of Lady Day



Now Available on DVD







Download Lady Day's Music on iTunes

Billie Holiday




Delicious
Bookmark this on Delicious
submit to reddit
Print Page

Digg!

MovieBlips: vote it up!

It seems as though every year dozens of films that celebrate the American spirit are released-- usually in the form of underdog sports movies-- wherein the outsider, the poorer kids, the unlikely team or the least experienced player defeats the favored competitor in spectacular glory. And while these usually result in some truly mesmerizing movies such as Rudy, The Greatest Game Ever Played, Miracle, Glory Road and Remember the Titans-- just like in high school where the jocks ruled the halls and sports funding is always renewed at the expense of the arts-- the one thing that's never fully celebrated is just how much the arts and especially music can be a similarly fascinating field. For whether you're on the stage or in the choir, if you take it seriously-- just like throwing or catching a ball-- working hard can in fact pay off... even if it's only temporary.

When musical biopics hit the silver screen-- it's always the drugs, the scandals, the groupie lifestyle and the drama that takes center stage more than anything else. And although the tales of musicians and especially jazz and blues artists in particular often end in tragedy-- the underdog spirit of fighting to be counted remains as yet another reminder of our true "only in America" dream to go out and get things done.

The life of Billie Holiday is no exception. Of course it ended in the most tragic of ways which we witnessed on the big screen in Lady Sings The Blues which reveled in the drugs and downward spiral instead of her accomplishments but honestly when you're presented with the facts that comprised the course of her life from birth onward, it seems as though that would be the inevitable conclusion.

Yet at the same time, that doesn't necessarily take away from just how extraordinary her accomplishments were. For she was able to bounce back from the most unspeakable of horrors again and again and-- after viewing this heartbreaking yet inspiring thirty minute biographical portrait of the woman-- I think it's safe to say that most of the athletes in the aforementioned biographical portraits had it extremely easy by comparison.

The granddaughter of a slave-- Billie Holiday was born to a nineteen year old mother and a jazz musician father who walked out on his responsibilities from the start as the first man to betray Holiday (yet certainly not the last). After the young Holiday was raped as a child-- as a female the crime was blamed on her and she was sentenced to a Catholic reform school until two years later when someone was finally able to free Billie.

Afterward, with no money and no way to support herself as a black young woman with nothing to her name in the racially unkind jazz era, she worked as a prostitute to get by until eventually she moved into the music world. And soon enough she joined groups as "the girl" or the singer, making appearances on the albums of legends like Goodman before she starred in a short jazz movie chronicling jealousy and heartbreak-- the building blocks of the blues-- with Duke Ellington.

Ironically ending up as part of the Fletcher Henderson orchestra in 1936 which had at one point been the one in which her father had been employed at the time of the pregnancy and birth of Holiday-- following her work with Henderson she forged an important alliance with Lester Young (who would bestow the nickname of "Lady Day" on Billie Holiday because of her elegance) and Count Basie.

The epitome of the sad fact that sometimes during moments of great professional success, you're struggling with personal heartbreak and drama-- shortly thereafter Holiday suffered through some bad marriages including one to a man who introduced her to heroin and opium and then reinforced her reliance on it. Facing the double standard of being a black woman in the business and having to dress as a maid to costar with Louis Armstrong in a bit part in a Hollywood movie--after Billie's mother died, she soon after lost her cabaret performers license and ended up in jail for a drug charge which garnered her eight months behind bars while some of the male musicians roamed free, using and abusing with wilder abandon.

Although her voice began to decline from drugs and personal stress and Holiday's next chapter of her life would be her most bitter one which came out in an autobiography-- perhaps the strongest way she wove her disappointment into art was with the recording of the song the DVD notes she "used as a weapon" with the release of "Strange Fruit" which had been written expressly for her and became a staple of her set list despite its unpopularity as an anti-racism song that confronted the race issue head on.

While of course, her decline would continue until a tragic and far too young death which found her with police guard and under arrest while literally on her death bed (as though she were a dangerous threat)-- throughout the fairly succinct biography that also boasts some vintage, rare and/or unreleased performance footage and the Ellington short-- I couldn't help but admire the way she never gave into the setbacks that kept stacking up like dominoes until they just kept pushing into one another for the final crash.

While of course she was born into the blues and stayed in the blues (by working in the field that had made her father the type of man who put family second and walked out on her as a baby), and ultimately she died in the blues-- the reason she sang the blues so well is because she lived them. But in doing so, she never let that stop her from trying to conquer the next obstacle in her path as a musical version of one of those Disney Titans we know we'll always Remember.


Text ©2009, Film Intuition, LLC; All Rights Reserved. http://www.filmintuition.com

Unauthorized Reproduction or Publication Elsewhere is Strictly Prohibited.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Music Review: The Definitive Rod Stewart (Deluxe Edition 2-CD & DVD)




Now Available







Digg!

I think on first glance, it may be easy for the children of the baby boomers to discount the musical contributions of "Rod the Mod" or "Rod the Bod," a.k.a. Rod Stewart. A British/Scotish white man's version of Barry White who-- in his heyday-- frequently wore what can only be described as a grown-man's version of a baby's "Onesie" or unitard, Stewart embraced everything from fuchsia to sailor suits, leopard prints to earrings, and that instantly recognizable spiky big blonde hair. Additionally, he seemed to own the unofficial "Come Hither" one-night-stand soundtrack of the late '70s and early '80s with tunes like "Hot Legs," "Tonight I'm Yours (Don't Hurt Me)," and "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy?"

Yet, the Stewart I grew up with-- the more contemplative late '80s and early '90s Stewart who-- despite several critiques to the contrary citing his bloated ego and voracious appetite for fame-- released some of the most beguilingly beautiful and subtle pop songs of the last few decades.

Now a venerated member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame who only in 2004, shockingly won his first Grammy Award despite a whopping estimable 250 million in album and single sales, Rod Stewart is being embraced fully once again by Warner Brothers-- the label he'd called home for many years. Kicking off a series of planned releases, Warner sets the bar at an all-time high with The Definitive Rod Stewart which is available as a thirty-one song 2-disc CD set or a worthwhile 2-disc plus 1 music video DVD Deluxe Edition (featuring fourteen stellar performances).

Containing Stewart's smash singles beginning with his first huge simultaneous success here in the states and in the UK, "Maggie May" and moving chronologically through his career-- the tracks sound better than ever in this gorgeous reissue. Featuring a beautiful photograph filled booklet and thoughtful essay by Ben Edmonds, the Deluxe Edition offers a well-deserved second look at the career of the man who took his love of folk, blues, country, soul, and rock and managed to blend them all together in his own unique way. Also, it serves as quite a fascinating musical tour through his maturation as an artist from the raspy and more out-of-control sounds of some of his early work with Jeff Beck and Ron Wood with whom he became not only a pioneer "of blues-rock" (and also served as early inspiration for the boom of the British punk band The Sex Pistols) to his more introspective ballads like "Forever Young."

And initially as "Maggie" begins to play with a beautiful, long introduction typically cut off from radio versions, we're lost in romantic reverie before the rock tracks set in as we're transported back to the era of his earliest solo albums (in addition to the ones he worked on with The Jeff Beck Group and Faces) such as An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down (renamed in America to the uninspired The Rod Stewart Album), Every Picture Tells a Story, and Never a Dull Moment.



Despite a few clunkers and derivative songs such as "You Wear it Well," which sounds an awful lot like "Maggie May," "Every Picture Tells a Story" sounds even more incredible than ever as does the Faces tune "Stay With Me," which benefits incredibly from a terrific sound system to hear not only the singer's signature rasp but each and every strum of the guitar. Taken completely by surprise with "Sailing" which incidentally is the first music video included on the DVD of the Deluxe Edition (and features Stewart in a Village People like sailor suit approaching the Twin Towers and NYC in a video of pure bittersweet beauty)-- the nearly gospel like quality of the anthem which also seems rooted in classic folk or Woody Guthrie styled boxcar songs introduces us to a new side of Stewart not usually given much due.

Further moving into his dreamy ballads-- which again usually surround "getting it on"-- we move to the incredibly gorgeous "Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)" before he reminds us why Sheryl Crow's version of his "The First Cut is the Deepest" just will never cut it. After the great sing-along track "You're in My Heart (The Final Acclaim)," Stewart goes wild once more with his Rolling Stone and pre-ACDC like "Hot Legs" and the song for which he's possibly the most famous-- the now tongue-in-cheek "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy?"

While it's been used for laughs over the years (such as in this clip from So I Married an Axe Murderer) and was the subject of a lawsuit due to similarity to a Brazilian tune, according to the liner notes Stewart has always maintained that it was another third-person character song, yet his presence in the video as both the singer and the man in the bar probably didn't help matters.

Very instinctive of its post sexual-revolution time period with "Tonight I'm Yours (Don't Hurt Me)" that boasts a video staged like a naughty pool party with Rockette styled moves in lawn chairs, whips that seems to indicate that it's ready to turn into an orgy at any given moment-- ultimately, the videos are pretty dated (although humorous for a look at how times have changed in the now "safe sex" world).



Yet, the second disc of the set is by far the best, containing so many wonderful tunes-- from love stories to tales of heartbreak and woe, even including Stewart's embrace of Detroit's Motown with his aptly named "The Motown Song" (performed with The Temptations), as well as the one, the only "Forever Young," a perfect take on "Downtown Train," and the instantly relatable "My Heart Can't Tell You No," in which he refreshingly lets his guard down to sing a song about a man being used by a woman who's in love with someone else. Moving on with "I Don't Want to Talk About It" and the Billy Joel like "Rhythm of My Heart," the album and its DVD also contains a few rarities including unplugged versions of "Have I Told You Lately" and "Reason To Believe" and even boasts one previously unreleased track.

While unfortunately, the album was missing one of my personal favorites, "All For Love," which he performed with Bryan Adams and Sting for the film The Three Musketeers, it's a great set that displays all sides of the singer who managed to keep his unique style and rasp intact (even after intense cancer surgery which left him needing to re-train his voice) after all these years yet managed to change with the times and continue to release material that mixed genres, defied expectations, and proved once and for all that he wasn't just simply the self-satisfied sexy bad boy from his #1 album Blondes Have More Fun.


Track-Listing

DISC ONE
1. “Maggie May”
2. “Mandolin Wind”
3. “Every Picture Tells A Story”
4. “Stay With Me” – the Faces
5. “You Wear It Well”
6. “Sailing”
7. “The Killing Of Georgie, Parts 1 & 2”
8. “Tonight's The Night”
9. “The First Cut Is The Deepest”
10. “You’re In My Heart”
11. “I Was Only Joking”
12. “Hot Legs”
13. “Da Ya Think I’m Sexy”
14. “Passion”
15. “Young Turks”

DISC TWO
1. “Tonight I’m Yours”
2. “Baby Jane”
3. “Infatuation”
4. “Same Guys Have All The Luck”
5. “Love Touch”
6. “Forever Young”
7. “My Heart Can’t Tell You No”
8. “Downtown Train”
9. “This Old Heart Of Mine” – with Ronald Isley (1989 Version)
10. “I Don’t Want To Talk About It” – (1989 Version)
11. “Rhythm Of My Heart”
12. “The Motown Song” – with the Temptations
13. “Tom Traubert’s Blues (Waltzing Matilda)”
14. “Have I Told You Lately” – Unplugged Version
15. “Reason To Believe” – with Ronnie Wood (Unplugged Version)
16. “Two Shades Of Blue” – previously unreleased (1998)**

DISC THREE (DVD) – DELUXE EDITION only
1. “Sailing”
2. “I Don’t Want To Talk About It”
3. “The Killing Of Georgie, Parts 1 & 2"
4. “The First Cut Is The Deepest”
5. “You’re In My Heart”
6. “Hot Legs”
7. “Da Ya Think I’m Sexy”
8. “Ain’t Love A Bitch”
9. “She Won’t Dance With Me”
10. “Young Turks”
11. “Tonight I’m Yours”
12. “Baby Jane”
13. “If We Fall In Love Tonight”
14. “Ooh La La”

**Previously unreleased

Best Buy Co, Inc.