Afleveringen
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Docn' is back! This lost episode was taped two years ago upon the holiday season release of Peter Jackson's Get Back.
Divided into thirds and running nearly eight hours, Get Back is a look at the beginning of the end of the Beatles. The documentary is doubly successful: first, it complicates and challenges the conventional narrative for why the band broke up (Yoko, bickering) while establishing entirely new questions about what was really happening between these four bandmates. We watch as an arbitrary deadline - for a film, or show, or movie, or something - slowly approaches. The Beatles are then forced to decide if they will continue on at all - and, if so, how.
Whatâs surprising about Get Back is how enjoyable it really is to see one of the most over-scrutinized musical acts of the 21st century simply beingâŠthemselves. George is often self-deprecating and brittle; Paul is intensively creative and ambitious; John is an endless cutup; Ringo is hungover and/or hesitant. But when they all go up on that roof, the reservations and mythos crumble.
Joining us to talk Beatles for this very special episode is Leah Churner, co-host of The Horticulturati, a talk show about landscape design and gardening.
Docn' Podcast also celebrates the release of Chalk Diary, a collection of essays by our very own Adam Schragin!
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Canadian director and writer Dean DeBlois has a film oeuvre that reveals two passions: one, for bringing fantastical creatures to life via animation (Lilo & Stitch, 2002 and How to Train Your Dragon, 2010) and two, for the music of Icelandic band Sigur RĂłs, fronted by Jon Thor Birgisson (a.k.a. Jonsi), who DeBlois also featured in the acoustic short film Go Quiet (2010).
Sandwiched between Stitch and Dragon is Heima (2007), a film that has DeBlois chronicling a series of homecoming concerts performed by Sigur RĂłs for free across Iceland. As is appropriate for a documentary about a band whose music is the primary focus, the film eschews extended interviews or contextual explanations for the real thing: the band playing in various settings, alternately plugged in or not, with the camera panning across the faces of families drawn to the spectacle and to other objects of natural wonder. Joining us for this episode is Tim Robinson, a former island dweller himself who helps us discuss the winding and wooly path of these somewhat unlikely art-rock stars.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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The Woodstock Festival held in 1969 over three days in August would not be fated as a short and mostly sweet gathering around music and instead bears the historical weight of a sprawling and chaotic youth bacchanal that defines how we think about the sixties. But how well do we remember Woodstock itself? Thanks to a 1994 directorâs cut of the original 1970 film called Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace & Music (that director being Michael Wadleigh), we are treated to almost four hours of sound and visuals that is nothing if not transportive. The Docnâ crew task ourselves with the good, the bad, the exaggerated and the wonderful in this legendary movie and cultural memory, call for more fringe, and are a little less than enthusiastic about how we might have enjoyed sleeping in mud had we been there.
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This very special episode of Docn' has three big firsts - it's our first episode without co-host Carolyn on the microphone (boo), our first episode featuring a guest (yay) and our first discussion of a movie currently out in theaters (ambivalent noise).
We are joined by Managing Director of the Texas Archive of the Moving Image (or "TAMI") Elizabeth Hansen to talk about The Velvet Underground, the first music documentary from established and beloved director Todd Haynes.
We discuss how and maybe why this music film is just so damn visual, about film archives in general and Elizabeth's work with TAMI in particular, and about the laser focus of director Haynes and his choice of working with a small set of interviewees to tell a very big story.
Relevant links: The Velvet Underground in Dallas (at Vietnam Moratorium Day in 1969)
The Tyrrell Historical Library Collection - The Amazing Iceberg Machine (1980)
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Behind the Music was on for seventeen years and chronicled a dizzying amount of musicians on the sorta music-centric channel VH1. While episodes of the show are quite concise and not proper 'documentaries', we really couldn't avoid addressing this behemoth of very appropriate content.
Armed with breakthrough technology (a random number generator) and crucial data (a list of episodes), the Docn' crew were all set to rally...and then tragedy struck. While Doc'r Carolyn's episode on Lenny Kravitz was happily available online, searching for Adam's episode on Bette Midler and Andrew's on Grand Funk Railroad was ultimately doomed. Our second go-round was more successful, and we ultimately were able to find and analyze episodes on Natalie Cole and Styx.
Aside from commenting on the ups and downs of the artists profiled in the episode, we also reflect on our thoughts about the program in general and speculate about its rebirth this year as a part of Paramount+.
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This month we are excited to discuss the monumental music documentary series, VH1's Behind the Music, which aired from 1997 to 2014. This topic is too expansive for a single podcast episode so we are making it a multi-parter. This week the Docn' crew got together to assign viewing homework to each host for a show-and-tell to be released 14 days from now. With the help of random episode generation technology, Adam, Carolyn, and Andrew find out what Behind the Music they will be watching in this episode. We thought it best to live-record the random picks and resulting emotions therein.
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The breakthrough 1991 album Blood Sugar Sex Magik by The Red Hot Chili Peppers turned 30 this month, and our latest Docn' episode concerns Funky Monks, a promotional vehicle/making-of documentary about that very album.
Funky Monks was directed by Gavin Bowden and released one day after Blood Sugar Sex Magik, an accompanying visual spectacle to pair with an album that would (it turns out) need very little of a push to become not just tremendously successful but also instrumental in the evolution of what was then known as âalternativeâ rock. Funky Monks shows the band at a creative apex and on the cusp of major changes, and without hyperbole at what is possibly the most defining and important part of their career.
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In 2003 director/producer/writer Ondi Timoner posed the following question to a then-theoretical audience: would anyone ever possibly be interested in the travails of two similarly heady and ambitious (and pretty fresh) psych-influenced â90s bands meeting in some strange middlespace of warm recognition and mutual respect before taking deeply dark and contested divergent journeys?
The answer is âYESâ!.â Dig! is a documentary about the muddled relationship between alternative radio darlings The Dandy Wharhols and the more prolific/scattered Brian Jonestown Massacre. The movie reveals an excellent set of contrasts, with one band seemingly on a collision course with stardom (but at what creative cost?) and the other pulling deeper into violence and obscurity as if change the subject. Us three found Dig! to be enlightening and depressing - though for different reasons than when we first saw it - and that alone necessitates this reevaluation.
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For our late summer return your Docnâ pals take a bow with Madonna: Truth or Dare, a 1991 doc directed by Alek Kenshihia (of the feature full-length film With Honors in 1994, and of the 2017 Fergie short âFergie: Save it Till Morningâ) and starring Madonna but personally introducing her coterie of dancers, assistants, stage managers, family, and obscure hangers-on. Truth or Dare was a fantastically successful documentary by most critical and commercial standards, but perhaps because of Madonnaâs own constant reinventions or just the fact that it has been thirty dang years since its release, exploring this documentary in 2021 felt both nostalgic and fresh. Join us in cheers for the hardworking staff who made the 1990 Blonde Ambition tour such a success despite seasonal and other mishaps; indulge in jeers for âneatâ boy Kevin Costner and the Fascist State of Toronto.
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Suzi Q - 2019 - dir. Liam Firmager
At first blush the Suzi Quatro story might not reveal itself as the most fertile ground for a rockumentary - no singular superstar moments or deep tragedies mark this artistâs upward trajectory. Instead, Quartroâs challenges are dramatic but relatable, and her history contains more slow simmering and less sudden eruption.
Quatroâs difficulties with her immediate family (especially her musician sisters) are the product of years of resentment and regret, and likewise, the dogged question about âmaking itâ in the States seem to endlessly pepper press conferences and eat into even good news.
But the question of what success ultimately means - and more importantly what it means to Quatro - allow us to witness the bassist and singer-songwriter continuing to self-explore past the constrictive career expectancy of the seventies 'girl rocker' and right into the present day.
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We Are Twisted F***ing Sister! - 2014
Directed by Andrew HornThis loving glimpse into the early, awkward and very hardscrabble years of heavy metal band Twisted Sister was the final film that would be released by director Andrew Horn before his death in 2019.
And while in some fashion a world away from Horn's earlier masterpiece, Nomi Song (released 2004 about German singer and performer Klaus Nomi), We Are Twisted F***ing Sister is also about genesis and growth, struggles to sustain and create an identity, and the often intense bonds between an artist and audience.
Ending before Twisted Sister became a national name or an infamous one, the movie concentrates on the band's (absolutely punishing) working schedule, their many misses and few big hits, and their attempts to bridge the Long Island scene with the entire listening world.
Last note: This is definitely our most lively episode, and we hope you enjoy listening to it as much as we enjoyed recording it.
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The Last Waltz - 1978
Directed by Martin ScorseseMartin Scorseseâs 1978 filmic celebration of The Bandâs final performance (and more) has become so speculative and controversial since its release that a new viewer is almost better off jumping cold turkey into this historical and musical fray and letting the film wash over them like so many gallons of hard cider.
The concert that ended the sixteen years of The Bandâs touring took place on Thanksgiving Day in 1976 at the first venue they played under that name and features a gaggle of guest performers and a devoted audience. While The Last Waltz is barely a âThanksgivingâ movie in any obvious sense, as The Band pays tribute to their influences and contemporaries the mutual chords of appreciation and nostalgia reverberate into that unmistakable frequency.
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Glastonbury Fayre - 1972
Directed by Nicholas RoegGlastonbury Festival as we know it today is regarded as formative and sprawling, the kind of highly coordinated event required to book not just massive superstars (Paul McCartney, Taylor Swift, Kendrick Lamar) but what the festival itself calls "the tapas Glastonbury experience," or varied entertainments and adventures off the main stage.
But in 1971 the Festival was not the Festival at all but Glastonbury Fair, and unlike its many future incarnations it centered around one singular vision - a performance stage built like a pyramid upon and around which positive human passions could commingle.
Musical acts were eclectic and ranged from progressive stalwarts (Traffic, Fairport Convention) to what have landed as more obscure or specialized (Family, Terry Reid, Arthur Brown). Likewise the spirituality was grab-bag, from Sunday Mass to - as we discuss - a bit of an oopsie when the wrong Eastern spiritualist was booked for an appearance. Other puzzles include the fact that David Bowie performed but was not captured for this documentary, and that The Grateful Dead definitely did NOT perform but were included on the festival soundtrack.
Curiosities aside, Glastonbury Fayre is a full, engrossing time capsule that at best reconnects us with the idea of what kinds of spontaneous joy a planned experiment can produce.
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A Poem is a Naked Person - 2015
Directed by Les BlankForty years elapsed between the filming of Les Blankâs documentary âaboutâ Leon Russell and its eventual release in 2015, a gap attributed to coagulating bad blood between the central subject and the filmmaker. Blank filmed A Poem Is A Naked Person for two years, observing Russell up close at his Oklahoma studio while also taking short detours into the life of locals and the surrounding scenery. The result is a film that is less a portrait of one musician and more a concentration of countless minutes into just ninety, a view from an armâs length that is still incredibly personal.
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Only Yesterday - 2007
Directed by Samantha PetersSpotify Playlist
The Carpenters were a sister and brother duo from California (by way of Connecticut) first associated - often with derision - with the gauzy and sentimental music of the early seventies that began to out-populate the squall of psychedelic and urgent rock that defined the end of the sixties. But after the death of Karen Carpenter at just thirty-two due to complications related to an eating disorder, even the bandâs most innocent songs are now retroactively cut with melancholy. As this BBC documentary also reveals, Karenâs silent suffering was part of a pattern as The Carpenters were ground down by the myriad stresses of constantly touring, drug addiction, and broken romance. Alternately cast as simple and doomed, we discuss a film that gives the siblings the nuance they deserve.
Special Thanks for research on this episode: Tim Harris, Daniel Gomez
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Supplementary Materials:
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1991 The Year Punk Broke
Directed by Dave Markey
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For our second episode, our rocâ docâ watchers leave sunny seventies California and traverse across a decade and over intercontinental borders to witness the workings of a huge European festival tour featuring Sonic Youth, Nirvana, Dinosaur Jr., Gumball, and Babes in Toyland.
The film is 1991: The Year Punk Broke, a collection of concerts and other assorted happenings captured on 8mm by Dave Markey and released one year later after Nirvana had effectively conquered the hearts and minds of a generation impassioned with apathy. Through fan interactions, live sets, backstage banter both staged (apparently inspired by the Madonna doc Truth Or Dare, which none of us have seen) and improvised, we get an armâs length but nonetheless revealing look at bands pushing out of their indie-rock habitats into the inviting if bewildering tendrils of popular culture and mass appeal.
Enjoy our Spotify Playlist of songs related to this and other episodes.
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What's Supp (Supplementary Materials)
Tour Diary by director Dave Markey
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Welcome to Docnâ, a new podcast of rock docâ straight talk from old friends Andrew Basile, Carolyn Cunningham, and Adam Schragin. For this first round of rockumentary discussion (or second, as the first attempt to record was destroyed by what we can only assume was an Act of God and/or a preemptive strike from the Henley camp), our trio inexplicably begin with 2013âs History of the Eagles, a more than three-hour exploration into the many ups, downs, and sideways stories that constitute the career and post-career of the inescapable country-rock California band that so defined the seventies.
After some brief introductions into Our Life with the Eagles and a bit of stumbling over the bandâs origin story, the feathers really start flying as we amateur ornithologists dig into the personalities (or lack thereof) behind the music, including of course "Mr." Don Felder, Timothy âGackedâ Schmit, and a close examination of Glenn Frey's overarching smug doucheness and the unblinking robot anti-magnetism that defines Don Henley.
While the final verdict on the documentary (and band) remains passionately mixed, we enjoyed rethinking The Eagles and hope you'll enjoy listening to us hash it out as much as Joe Walsh used to enjoy taking a chainsaw to a hotel room.
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