
Why rock fans can't get enough of classic music documentaries
Netflix alone has films about Wham!, James Blunt, Elvis Presley, Quincy Jones and the making of the 1985 celebrity recording of the single 'We Are the World', while Apple TV's roster currently includes documentaries on Sparks, Eric Clapton, Sheryl Crow and The Stooges.
Coastal, filmed by Neil Young's long-term partner, Daryl Hannah, will be of considerable interest to Young's fans as well as acting as a curtain-raiser to his gigs at Glastonbury in June and at London's Hyde Park in July. Shot in arty black-and-white, it has footage of Young on stage and amiably chatting with his bus driver as he makes his way from gig to gig.
In a new interview on Young's website, the point is made to Hannah that, given that Young is a 'storied, mythologised figure' while also 'quite inscrutable', the off-the-cuff moments in the documentary are valuable.
'I think you're right', she responds. 'People do find him this mysterious, inscrutable figure. That's why I decide ultimately to include those moments, so people get to see what a sweet and open person he can be. You see more of his humanity and less of the myth'.
Writing in the Guardian, Peter Bradshaw notes that the film 'tests the fanbase loyalty to the limits by being pointlessly and uninterestingly shot in arthouse black-and-white (though it exasperatingly bleeds out into colour over the closing credits) and by including an awful lot of material on the tour bus which is – how to put this? – not very interesting'.
'Part concert film, part home-video-on-wheels - Neil and bus driver JD, perfectly happy nattering about nothing in particular like two old blokes on a road trip - it has the same warmth and chattiness as the gigs', said the reviewer in Mojo magazine. 'Hard to think of another live Neil Young movie where he seems both a little unsure of himself and so contented'.
Over the years, magazines and critics have devised lists of the greatest-ever music documentaries. It's not exactly an easy task, given the vast number of films that have been made about a dizzying range of subjects.
As the film critic Mark Kermode once explained when embarking on his own list, 'What I have tried to do is to chart an admittedly erratic course from early milestones such as Jazz on a Summer's Day to more modern offerings such as Dig! and Moonage Daydream to give some sense of the vast and unwieldy scope of the genre and its subjects – from low-budget obscurities to Imax-friendly blockbusters; from cool blues to frantic post-punk via unearthed Afro-Cuban history'.
Here are 13 great music documentaries worth tracking down (if you haven't already seen them).
* Gimme Shelter (1970), by cinema verite trailblazers Albert and David Masyles and Charlotte Zwerin, is a riveting look at the Rolling Stones' US tour of 1969 - the tour that ended in the infamous outdoor concert at Altamont Speedway, at which the band hired local Hells Angels to provide security. It didn't end well. Mick Jagger at one point asks the crowd: 'Who's fighting, and what for? We don't want to fight'. One man, Meredith Hunter, who drew a revolver, was stabbed to death by a Hells Angel. It was the end of the Sixties, in more ways than one.
* Moonage Daydream (2022), by Brett Morgen, was an immersive and mesmerising documentary about David Bowie. As A.O. Scott remarked in the New York Times, 'it's less a biography than a séance. Instead of plodding through the chronology of Bowie's life and career, Morgen conjures the singer's presence through an artful collage of concert footage and other archival material, including feature films and music videos'. Morgen's previous documentaries included Crossfire Hurricane, about the Stones.
* Woodstock (1970), Michael Wadleigh's Oscar-winning documentary of the August 1969 Woodstock festival, a counterculture landmark, features music by such acts as Crosby, Stills & Nash, Santana, Janis Joplin, Ten Years After, Jimi Hendrix and The Who, as a vast crowd descended on Max Yasgur's farm at Bethel, New York. Mick Richards's 2019 features documentary, Creating Woodstock, fleshes out the story. A two-disc 'Ultimate Collector's Edition' Blu-Ray set - Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace and Music: The Director's Cut' - includes many never-seen-before performances from Joan Baez, Grateful Dead and others.
* The Beatles: Get Back (2022) is Peter Jackson's three-part documentary series, based on footage and audio recorded in January 1969. Variety magazine sums it up thus: "What's startling about 'Get Back' is that as you watch it, drinking in the moment-to-moment reality of what it was like for the Beatles as they toiled away on their second-to-last studio album, the film's accumulation of quirks and delights and boredom and exhilaration becomes more than fascinating; it becomes addictive". Also featured: the Fabs' rooftop concert in London's Savile Row.
* Laurel Canyon (2020), by Alison Ellwood, is an excellent two-part documentary series about the musicians who inhabited Laurel Canyon, 'a rustic canyon in the heart of LA' and made it a hotbed of musical creativity. Jackson Browne, Graham Nash, Linda Ronstadt and Don Henley are among those interviewed.
* It Might Get Loud (Davis Guggenheim, 2009), showcases three guitar virtuosos - Jimmy Page, The Edge, and Jack White - to scintillating effect as we trace the development of careers and their signature sounds. Uncut magazine: "It Might Get Loud is about the way the electric guitar and the amplifier combine to create a kind of superpower, transforming the player into a sonic god".
* Buena Vista Social Club (Wim Wenders, 1999), is a brilliant retelling of how the American musician Ry Cooder assembled a diverse, mostly elderly, group of veteran Cuban musicians and steered them to global popularity. "Filmed in Amsterdam and New York, the concert scenes find the stage awash in such intense joy, camaraderie and nationalist pride that you become convinced that making music is a key to longevity and spiritual well-being", as the New York Times described it.
* Oil City Confidential (Julien Temple, 2010) is a celebration of R&B specialists Dr Feelgood - Wilko Johnson, Lee Brilleaux, John B. Sparks, John Martin - and the distinctive Canvey Island environment from which they sprang.
* Muscle Shoals: The Greatest Recording Studio in the World (Greg Camalier, 2013) tells how a small city in Alabama became home to the Fame recording studios and the Muscle Shoals Sound Studios, which were established by Fame's former house band. Among those featured are Aretha Franklin, Percy Sledge and Keith Richards.
* 20 Feet from Stardom (Morgan Neville, 2013), deservedly won an Oscar for its sympathetic look at the careers of notable backing singers such as Merry Clayton, who duetted with Jagger on the Stones song, Gimme Shelter. Archive footage and new interviews combine to thrilling effect.
Simple Minds: Everything is Possible (Joss Crowley, 2023) is a comprehensive look at the rise of Simple Minds, the Glasgow band who rose from art-rock beginnings to become the most successful Scottish group ever. Among the talking heads are band members as well as Bob Geldof, Bobby Gillespie and James Dean Bradfield.
Since Yesterday: The Untold Story of Scotland's Girl Bands (Blair Young, Carla J Easton, 2024) cleverly unfolds a story of Scottish pop music from the 1960s onwards through the recollections of those far-sighted women who helped make it; among them are Strawberry Switchblade, Sunset Gun, His Latest Flame and the Hedrons.
Big Gold Dream (Grant McPhee, 2015) is a fascinating, award-winning account of two hugely influential Scottish indie record labels - Edinburgh's FAST Product and Glasgow's Postcard Records. Bands featured include Fire Engines, Scars, the Rezillos and Aztec Camera. Two years later, Grant took up the story again in Teenage Superstars, featuring The Vaselines, BMX Bandits, The Pastels, The Soup Dragons, The Jesus and Mary Chain, amongst others. Recommended.
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The Sun
2 days ago
- The Sun
Inside Kate Moss' wild new lifestyle as pals fear boozy supermodel, 51, is going back to her old 90s partying ways
KATE MOSS swapped wellness crystals for cans of lager at the weekend as she partied among revellers at BST Hyde Park Festival. In scenes reminiscent of her hedonistic Nineties antics, the supermodel, 51, knocked back the booze and enjoyed music by big names including Van Morrison and Neil Young. 6 Onlookers said she appears to be back on the party circuit. 'Kate was having it large at Hyde Park and was knocking back cans of Peroni,' one told me. 'She was hanging out in Van Morrison's private backstage area, before watching him from the side of the stage — before she went back to the bar for another drink. 'When she watched Neil Young, she flitted between the audience and the suites to keep the beers flowing. 'Kate sank a fair few drinks with her friends and quietly slipped away before Neil finished his set. 'The whole time she was laughing and giggling. 'Kate was quite literally the life and soul of the party. And there wasn't a crystal in sight.' This isn't the first time fans have seen glimmers of the old Kate in action. Last month, festivalgoers at Glastonbury claimed they saw her partying on Worthy Farm. One told me: 'People keep saying they've seen Kate, but she's flying so under the radar no one can get a clear sighting of her. Watch worrying moment Kate Moss looks 'on edge and frantic' as she poses front row at Paris Fashion Week 'Wants to have fun' 'It's like old times when she'd been partying hard at Glastonbury until sunrise and everyone was looking out for her. 'There was a rumour going around that she was spotted in one of the VIP areas in Block 9 wearing a veil, but no one could say for sure it was her.' My insiders tell me that Kate was, indeed at Glastonbury, but that she shunned on-site camping for a more comfortable stay at the nearby private members' club, Babington House. 'Kate wasn't up until late afternoon and would head over to Worthy Farm around 9pm,' one source explained. 'She stayed at Babington to stay away from the crowds, but she went to Glasto and had a riot. 'Lila, Kate's daughter, was there, too. They had a lot of fun.' Fans who have stuck with the supermodel since she found fame as a teenager are, naturally, concerned. The photographs of her partying with beers at BST came just weeks after the collapse of her wellness empire Cosmoss, which would be a bitter pill for her to swallow. Just days before Glastonbury began, Kate's company called in liquidators. In total, it owes unsecured creditors £2,939,729. And papers signed by the supermodel revealed that Cosmoss has little more than £5,000 in the bank, with £241,000 of leftover stock. Kate launched the brand in 2022 after the lockdown put paid to her partying. Back in 2020, one of her closest pals, DJ Fat Tony, said she had been sober for two years. And as she launched Cosmoss, Kate unveiled a rebranded version of herself to fans. She said at the time: 'I had time on my hands. I wanted to create something that would help me feel more grounded, something I could share. 'Cosmoss was literally blended at my kitchen table.' The range — which is no longer available to order — included teas, a face oil and a 'sacred mist' which is said to 'provide a sense of inner peace'. In the interviews that followed to promote her products, Kate gave an insight into her clean new world and said she had started bathing in the moonlight to cleanse herself. She revealed: 'I like to start my day with tea and meditation, followed by some Pilates or yoga.' Highlighting her love of wellness crystals, she added: 'I put them out in the garden overnight when it's a full moon to cleanse them. I really believe in their power, and believe in the mystical and spiritual side of wellness.' Cracks in Kate's wellness journey began to show in 2023, when she stepped back into the spotlight and was out partying more. She was seen holding hands with the singer Skip Marley – grandson of reggae legend Bob – during a party in Turkey in May last year. 'Back out there' That was before being filmed falling out of a taxi during Lila's 22th birthday celebrations in Paris in October. It was Kate's return to her party lifestyle, pals claim, that influenced the break-up with her teetotal boyfriend of nine years, British photographer Nikolai Von Bismarck. In December, friends told this newspaper that the pair were going on 'different journeys'. One pal revealed: 'Kate feels fabulous and she wants to get back out there and have some fun.' And they weren't kidding. For her 51st birthday celebrations in January, a month after the split with Nikolai, Kate partied at three different venues across London. The revelry was in stark contrast to her more demure 50th, when she held a low-key bash in Paris for a tight-knit group of friends. But this year, Kate hired out a suite in the Dorchester in Park Lane, before throwing a dinner at the hotel's luxury restaurant, China Tang. She was joined by celebrity including Nineties party pal Stella McCartney and Jade Jagger. Kate then headed to The Globe in Notting Hill, West London, with her group, where they partied until the early hours of the morning. While many fans and followers welcomed the old Kate back with open arms, others were concerned about her behaviour. Even more so after a bizarre video of her at Paris Fashion Week this March went viral. 6 6 'Prime of her life' In the clip, from Isabel Marant's show, Kate was seen acting erratically and jerking from side to side. One fan said on social media: 'Why is she so fidgety? This just makes me anxious.' Another added: 'Why is nobody talking about this? I feel sad every time I see this.' Meanwhile, on TikTok, another worried fan wrote: 'Why did they post this? Kate is seemingly not OK.' Less than a week after the video, Kate was photographed holding a bottle of Corona beer and puffing away on a cigarette as she walked through central London. It is a stark contrast to the clean-living wellness guru of two years ago. Friends close to Kate insist there is nothing for people to worry about. 'Kate's a woman in the prime of her life and she wants to have fun,' one told me. 'She hangs out with Lila a lot, too, and thinks of herself as a 'cool mum' who can keep up with the young ones. 'People are shocked because it's not the Kate they've seen for a while, but she likes a few drinks and she smokes like a chimney — albeit she's using vapes now because they're 'healthier'. She's always the one to get a party started and wants to get back out there and enjoy life. 'The people speculating about her on social media need to stop worrying so much. 'Kate has just come back from Ibiza with Lila and she had a great time at BST. 'She'll focus on closing down Cosmoss, then will be looking for her next venture. 'Kate isn't a woman who can be kept down for long.' 6 6


Daily Mail
2 days ago
- Daily Mail
Dua Lipa flaunts her toned figure in a sexy bodysuit before flashing her abs during gym session as she shares slew of recent snaps
Dua Lipa flaunted her toned figure in a series of stylish snaps as she posted a new album to Instagram on Monday titled: 'a little bit of everything.' The Houdini singer, 29, looked sensational in one of the images as she posed in a sexy bodysuit and low slung jeans. Elsewhere, a short clip she posted saw her flashing her abs in a tiny black bralet and tight black leggings during a gym session. Other snaps in the album saw her living her life of luxury as she jetted around in a helicopter and enjoyed swanky dinners out with family and friends. She also posed up a storm in a tight black dress which showed off her incredible physique. Missing from the pictures however was her fiancé Callum Turner – although this month the pair did confirm their engagement. It comes after over the weekend Callum and Dua packed on the PDA as they enjoyed an outing to BST Hyde Park on Friday evening. She looked happier than ever as she boasted a big smile with actor Callum, 35. Dua and her man were snapped backstage at a VIP area of Hyde Park, as Neil Young was scheduled to perform. Appearing in a playful mood, the pair held hands while walking through the festival before they embraced for a hug. Visibly laughing, Callum could be seen squeezing the singer tightly before they shared a passionate kiss. Meanwhile, Dua last month revealed she would 'love' to have children with Callum after announcing their engagement. The singer, who turns 30 in August, publicly shared her excitement for the first time since the actor got down on one knee. The hitmaker posed for the front cover of British Vogue where she looked stunning in a pale pink bra that highlighted her jaw–dropping figure In the interview, Dua discussed her family plans, saying she's concerned how having children will fit in with her career as a pop star. In another as she headed to the gym she posed in a light grey crop top and tight black leggings 'I'd love to have kids one day,' she said. 'But it's like the constant question of when would there ever be a good time – how it would fit in with my job and how it would work if I went on tour, and how much time out I'd have to take. 'I think it's just one of those things that's going to happen when it happens. I love kids, but I think there's so much more to raising a child than just loving children.' Confirming their engagement, Dua said: 'Yeah we're engaged. It's very exciting. 'This decision to grow old together, to see a life and just, I don't know, be best friends forever - it's a really special feeling.' Speaking of their wedding plans, Dua said she hopes to finish her tour and Callum to wrap up filming before they tie the knot. While the wedding hasn't been at the forefront of her mind amid her busy schedule touring, she did admit she has started to think about her dress. She said: 'I want to finish my tour, Callum's shooting, so we're just enjoying this period. 'I've never been someone who's really thought about a wedding, or dreamt about what kind of bride I would be. All of a sudden, I'm like: 'Oh, what would I wear?''


Daily Mail
2 days ago
- Daily Mail
Kate Moss vapes and sips a beer as she enjoys a concert in London
Kate Moss was spotted puffing on a vape and sipping a beer as she enjoyed a day out at BST Hyde Park on Friday where Neil Young was headlining. The supermodel, 51, looked typically stylish in a plunging leopard-print maxidress, and sandals. She hid her eyes behind dark sunglasses and wrapped a thick scarf around her, despite the UK heatwave. Kate toted her belongings in a large shoulder bag and accessorized with a quirky gold eye ring. She was spotted enjoying a few beers with pals and puffing on a red vape while watching Neil headline the event from the VIP area. Shades: She was seen covering her eyes with sunglasses Style: Kate wore a leopard-print maxidress and a black scarf Vaping: She was spotted enjoying a few beers with pals and puffing on a red vape while watching Neil headline the event