Filmed in 1969 to capture an all-star
anniversary concert at the Grand Ole Opry, the storied “mother church” of
country music, this serviceable documentary balances behind-the-scenes insights
about the careers of wannabe stars with polished vignettes featuring
established artists. Most of the picture comprises blandly shot footage of
performances on the Opry stage, and there’s value in seeing vintage clips of
Johnny Cash, Bill Monroe, and Dolly Parton, among many others. Yet one is
challenged to identify much difference between this content and, say,
appearances by these folks on TV shows from the same era. About the only thing
elevating the Opry scenes is the interstitial material, with performers
including Bill Anderson crowding around microphones to read crass commercials.
A general sense emerges of an Opry broadcast not as a pristine showcase for
musical excellence but rather a commodity like any other type of mainstream
entertainment. Therefore, the most interesting elements of The Nashville Sound are the moments showing B-listers trudging
through humiliating spotlight gigs (as when Jeannie C. Reilly performs a new
tune for a handful of listeners at a party thrown by a label executive), plus
the recurring trope illustrating the arrival on the Nashville scene of new
singer-songwriter Herbie Howell.
Among the star performers, Charley
Pride stands out with his keening sustained notes during “Kaw-Liga,” Parton
charms with her unvarnished performance of “Blue Ridge Mountain Home,” and Cash
renders a typically rousing version of “Folsom Prison Blues.” An in-studio jam
session featuring a young Charlie Daniels, among other slick players, generates
the most heat, musically speaking, whereas blander performances (such as
Reilly’s turn on the Opry stage with “Harper Valley P.T.A.”) quickly fade from
memory. Some of the sequences of pure reportage, such as a golf tournament
featuring Glen Campbell, come and go so quickly as to be meaningless—and, to be
frank, the material that gets the most attention, Howell’s story, is merely
okay. Although earnest, Howell is not particularly interesting as a musician or
as a presence, so it’s hard to get excited about his quest for stardom.
Nonetheless, the project as a whole provides an interesting snapshot of a
particular industry at a particular time, in some ways very different from and
in other ways very similar to the modern country-music scene.
The
Nashville Sound: FUNKY
2 comments:
You should check out HEARTWORN HIGHWAYS, about the outlaw country scene of the 70's. It came out in 81 but was film in the last week of 75 and the first of 76. Something crazy like that. Unlike what you're describing in this film, there are no "polished" vignettes. Just a bunch of dudes like the great Townes Van Zandt, or Guy Clark jamming with just a guitar and great songs. And mostly playing for each other when not on a stage somewhere.
There's a great scene of a young Rodney Crowell and Steve Earl jamming in I believe Guy Clarks living room. Townes playing cpl of his songs in a blacksmiths kitchen.
Correction; I spelled one of my country outlaws name wrong. EARLE, as in Steve is the right spelling. Damn autocorrect! Gotta correct IT!
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