For the Love of the Music: The Club 47 Folk Revival, directed by Todd Kwait & Rob Stegman (Ezzie Films/Bluestar Media, 2013) various artists, "Folk music is about something," says West Virginia-born, Boston-residing bluegrass musician Everett Lilly (1924-2012) in this engaging, full-length documentary about the 1960s Boston/Cambridge folk scene. Lilly succinctly expresses folk's appeal, even (or maybe especially) to those of us who experience traditional songs far removed from their natural environment. I know that in my own case, as a naive, small-town Midwestern kid, I was amazed that songs could be about something beyond teenage hormones and adolescent angst. Even now, the "aboutness" that defines traditional music continues to fascinate and thrill me.
Both famous and obscure get their due in a series of surprisingly frank interviews. They prove to be an intelligent and articulate bunch. Unlike other forms of pop music, the revival overwhelmingly attracted (and, in its current incarnation, attracts) smart people, possibly by folk's very nature. It is not a genre you get to simply by turning on the radio. You need to be inquisitive and open-minded just to be aware of its existence.
Doing a service to both the historically and the musically minded, For the Love highlights a cultural episode that, if less celebrated than its Greenwich Village contemporary, is hardly less vital and influential. Among its abundant virtues and insights, the documentary sheds light on the forgotten contributions of the late Eric Von Schmidt, the intellectual author of the movement in Boston/Cambridge, also a model for Dylan in his formative years. Von Schmidt, it's further worth noting, composed the classic "Joshua Gone Barbados," among the most enduring topical songs the folk era produced. A companion CD combines performances from the film and live ones taped more recently at the Putney School in Vermont. Half the cuts are of actual folk music, the rest of current singer-songwriting whose relationship to folk seems to consist of no more than the shared use of acoustic instruments. Overall, with the exception of Tim Eriksen's memorably apocalyptic reading of "Oh Death," the CD is less interesting than the DVD. What you need to know, in other words, is what's in the film. ![]() ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 23 August 2014 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() Click on a cover image to make a selection. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |