During his opening remarks
at the 1972 Wattsax Music Festival, an all-day concert designed to celebrate
black pride on the seventh anniversary of the Watts riots, politician/preacher
Jesse Jackson captured the moment with his typical rhyming flair: “We have
shifted from ‘burn, baby, burn’ to ‘learn, baby, learn.’” In that spirit, the festival—commemorated
in this excellent documentary, which was released a year after the event took
place—featured uplifting messages about community, love, and respect. And yet Wattstax director Mel Stuart also widened
his focus to address some of the issues that provoked the Watts riots in the
first place. At regular intervals during the movie, Stuart cuts to incendiary
funnyman Richard Pryor providing irreverent comedy, as well as thoughtful
commentary. (Pryor’s material was filmed after the concert.) For instance,
Pryor does several hard-hitting minutes on the eternal quandary of the LAPD’s
trigger-happy attitude toward black suspects.
These combative moments mesh
surprisingly well with such soothing scenes as the Staple Singers performing
“Respect Yourself” onstage at the Los Angeles Coliseum during the festival.
Combined with Stuart’s documentary footage of everyday life in Watts—much of
which is cleverly juxtaposed with music—all of the elements coalesce into a mosaic about race in America circa the early ’70s. In fact,
many of the film’s best scenes feature ordinary men and women speaking
casually—but passionately—about the indignities they suffer. In one memorable
sequence, several men recall the first time they were called “niggers,”
pointedly describing the explanations their parents offered when asked about
the hateful word. (One of the man-on-the-street interviewees is actor Ted Lange, who
later played the bartender on The Love
Boat.)
Yet the music, of course, is the main attraction. Since the concert
was sponsored by Stax Records, many icons of ’70s black music—from James Brown
to the entire Motown roster—are conspicuously absent. Nonetheless, the onstage
lineup makes for a varied and vibrant mix. The Bar-Kays tear through their swaggering
funk number “Son of Shaft,” Luther Ingram sings a heartfelt “If Loving You Is
Wrong, I Don’t Want to Be Right,” Jimmy Jones represents the gospel genre with
“Someone Greater Than I,” Albert King lays down two slinky Delta blues numbers,
and Rufus Thomas gets the crowd going with his novelty number “Do the Funky
Chicken.” Funkmaster General Issac Hayes closes the evening with an epic
reading of his Oscar-winning “Theme from Shaft,” as well as the softer number
“Soulsville,” which suits the peace-and-love mood of the event. (As one
concertgoer says succinctly when asked for his reaction: “Like, shit, the whole
thing is going on.”)
Thanks to Stuart’s holistic approach to depicting the
festival and its larger context, thanks to the great tunes from Stax artists,
and thanks to remarkable editing by David Blewitt, David Newhouse, and Robert
K. Lambert, a unique historical moment was preserved in a suitably unique
fashion.
Wattstax:
RIGHT ON
No comments:
Post a Comment