Deep Blues [VHS]

Deep Blues [VHS]
by Robert Mugge

Deep Blues [VHS]
List Price: $19.98
Category: VHS Video
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Product details

Actor: Booker T. Laury, Jack Owens (II), Jessie Mae Hemphill, Junior Kimbrough, Roosevelt Barnes
Director: Robert Mugge
Edition: VHS Tape
Format: Color, NTSC
Running Time: 90 minutes
Release Date: 2000-01-25
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Publisher: Fox Lorber
Studio: Fox Lorber

VHS Movie Reviews of Deep Blues [VHS]

Movie Review: Gift
Summary: 5 Stars

This was purchased as a Christmas gift for my husband. He is very excited about it although he has not had time to play the DVD as yet.

Movie Review: Deep Blues Indeed
Summary: 3 Stars

Although the music in this film was wonderful, I was expecting a sort of joyful trip to the south, rather than a positively depressing piece on under appreciated musicians. To see the squalor in which R.L. Burnside resides is enough to make me run to the video store for a slick and fluffy movie like "The Honeydrippers." I think this sort of film is a little too real for me.

Movie Review: Bringing Mississippi Blues to Life
Summary: 4 Stars

This is an absolutely necessary addition to any blues/music lover's collection. It archives a number of noteworthy blues musicians of the early 20th century, as well as capturing sounds and styles that echo back to the Dark Continent. Many of the artists featured are now dead or unable to perform due to illness such as stroke, as it explains within the liner notes of the DVD. This makes the chronicling of these musicians all the more special in this wonderful pilgrimage to Mississippi that is Deep Blues. I would recommend this documentary to anyone who loves music, the blues, or would like to gain further insight into the Mississippi-style delta blues.

Movie Review: In The Back Streets Of The Blues- Life On The "Chittlin' Circuit"
Summary: 5 Stars

Over the past year or so I have spent some time in this space addressing the question of why various male folk performers like Jesse Winchester, Tom Rush, and Chris Smither, from the folk revival of the 1960's,
did or did not become "king of the hill" in that genre.(I am in the process of doing the same for female folk singers as "queen of the hill"). I have also addressed that same question, although not as extensively, concerning the various 1950's rock `n' roll artists who were left behind when rock exploded on the scene. I thought I had covered so many of the artists from the blues scene that I did not think that I needed to pose the question in that genre. Apparently I was wrong as this well done blues documentary, "Deep Blues", directed by Robert Mugge and narrated by the famed blues musicologist Robert Palmer poses that very question point blank at those left behind down at the lesser levels of the blues pantheon.

This film spends no little time on setting the framework for its above-mentioned premise. That question, as the documentary unfolds, keeps honing in on who has kept the blues tradition alive back down at the roots-mainly in the rural South among the black agricultural laborers, small town black entertainment entrepreneurs and others who want to continue the blues tradition of the Saturday night "juke joint". In short this film is a labor of love by Mugge and Palmer in honor of those who have kept the blues tradition alive, mainly as a labor of their love. Although this film was produced in 1991 in the year 2009 the same question could be fruitfully posed about who has kept the faith down home. Although there are periodic revivals of the blues around such events as Martin Scorsese's six-part PBS blues documentary of 2003 the hard truth is that the blues, as a genre, is not generally a paying proposition these days. So it has to be love of this art form that drives the work.

A number of lesser known blues performers performing their work, some that I had heard of previously others that I have not, form the core of this film. After viewing the performances I come way, once again, with that nagging question about why some artists "made it" and others did not. All blues aficionados are familiar with Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Son House, Memphis Minnie, Etta James,"Big Mama" Thornton and the like. But what about those on the "chittlin' circuit"- the likes of Junior Kimbrough, R.L. Burnside, Jessie Mae Hemphill, Roosevelt Barnes, Big Jack Johnson and Lonnie Pitchford? I thought not. Some decided for personal reasons to stay put, some were in the wrong place at the wrong time, some are merely imitative of greater artists and some are just flat out not good enough for the "bigs". Nevertheless this is their story. Kudos to Mugge and Palmer for telling it.


Movie Review: A Missed Opportunity
Summary: 2 Stars

This film should have been great. The list of musicians profiled gave me high expectations. However, it suffers on mainly two fronts: first, the filming is amateurish. Although the sound quality is tremendous, the way scenes and interviews were filmed and edited was stale and uninventive. Compare this to "You See Me Laughin'" and you'll see a vast difference in the quality. This documentary was simply not filmed or edited well. Some of the best parts of this film were the outtakes that were in the "extras" section of the DVD. Dave Stewart, throughout the film, was an annoyance, yet in the outtakes, he made a solid contribution. The second weakness, unfortunately, was Robert Palmer. In spite of his experience, credentials, and personal relationships with some of the folks in this film, his interviews were simply boring. Not the fault of his subjects, but rather he simply makes too many inane comments and asks vapid, silly questions. Simply put, he made a film with potential into a mediocrity. Too bad. Avoid this film and pick up "You See Me Laughin."

Summary of Deep Blues [VHS]

This superb documentary vividly illustrates the enduring vitality of country blues, an idiom that most mainstream music fans had presumed dead or, at best, preserved through more scholarly tributes when filmmaker Robert Mugge and veteran blues and rock writer Robert Palmer embarked on their 1990 odyssey into Mississippi delta country. What Arkansas native and former Memphis stalwart Palmer knew, and Mugge captured on film, was that the blues was not only alive but still intimately woven into the daily lives of rural blacks.

Palmer, a former rock musician and Memphis Blues Festival cofounder best known for his bylines in The New York Times and Rolling Stone, had already chronicled the saga of Southern blues in his seminal book that provides the film's title. He's an astute guide, and Mugge underlines this role by pairing him with British rocker Dave Stewart (Eurythmics), whose avid interest in the music makes him an effective foil.

The film's real triumph, however, rests in the team's success in capturing modern day blues survivors and inheritors playing in the bars, juke joints, and barns of delta country. Palmer, who had returned several years earlier to the delta to capture these artists for his scrappy Fat Possum label, introduces us to the now-amplified but still elemental blues of R.L. Burnside, the late Junior Kimbrough, Jessie Mae Hemphill, Roosevelt "Booba" Barnes, and other keepers of the faith. Mugge, whose profiles of Al Green, Sonny Rollins, and other musicians probed their cultural and artistic contexts with intelligence and sensitivity, captures both the music and the milieu in crisp color footage. Deep Blues thus triumphs as a testament to the blues' deep roots and an unintentional eulogy for Palmer, who would pass away in the mid-'90s just as the gut-bucket music of Burnside and Kimbrough served notice that the blues were alive and kicking. --Sam Sutherland

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