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Summer of Soul (2021) with Sly/Stevie/Gladys Knight I've seen the Sly footage before but this looks like another must see. | |
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Damn!!...I want to see this. | |
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It’s on Hulu I plan to watch it this weekend #SOCIETYDEFINESU | |
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Watching tonight! Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It! | |
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Ugh, just give us the raw concert footage please. | |
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You know, it really peeved me when I heard about the Summer of Soul. White American continues to erased Black culture. Never, in 53 years of life, have I ever heard about Summer of Soul. When I saw a report on CBS Sunday Morning about it last week, I was just stupified. How did we never hear about this?!?! This was huge! Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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What a ridiculous claim. Blaming White America on you never hearing of this. When it was a jew that filmed this and (poorly) tried to make use of the footage for all these years. When you heard about it through CBS Sunday Morning, a national TV problem.
The Bombing Of West Philly was a documentary made in 1987 for PBS. Where were you in 1987?
Let the Fire Burn, the one you probably seen, was directed by Jason Osder, a white man.
And let's not forget.
"Maxwell House Coffee sponsored the event, and 300,000 people showed up. Walter Cronkite even announced the festival during a broadcast that also covered the Apollo 11 moon landing."
Damn you white people. | |
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I wanna see this.I'll definitely buy the blu-ray when it comes out. | |
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Some tears with Mahalia and Mavis moment. I hope they release the whole concert in full. Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It! | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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lol pointing out that a jew filmed this and sat on the footage is racist but blaming white people for erasing black culture isn't. Mine's actually based in facts.
"Harold Monroe Tulchin was born to Jewish immigrants from Ukraine in Elizabeth, N.J., on Dec. 23, 1926. His father, Leo, was a machinist and a supermarket manager, and his mother, the former Clara Fisher, was a homemaker. He graduated from the University of Iowa with bachelor’s and master’s degrees and studied acting and directing at the Dramatic Workshop in Manhattan. From a job in programming with Sterling Television, a syndicator, he went to the advertising agency Young & Rubicam, where he worked for President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s 1956 re-election campaign, his daughter said. He then began directing live commercials for shows like “The $64,000 Question” and “The Philco Television Playhouse.” He became an expert in the use of videotape, especially in commercials. In the years after the Harlem festival, Mr. Tulchin directed TV specials with Wayne Newton, Noel Harrison and Lesley Gore, and a rock ’n’ roll revival special starring Chubby Checker and Little Richard. He also formed a commercial production firm."
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/14/arts/television/hal-tulchin-90-dies-documented-a-little-seen-black-woodstock.html [Edited 7/4/21 8:56am] | |
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So I was able to start this on yesterday and get through the 1st 15 minutes before my kids killed the vibe. I've never seen Stevie get down on drums like that. This looks to be really good and I can't wait to finish. * On a side note, I saw the entire Sly concert on YouTube a few years ago. Really interesting and great set but was the 1st time I realized that Freddie would sing Sly's parts from time to time... | |
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Looks great, Stevie really is a wonder I'm afraid of Americans. I'm afraid of the world. | |
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I watched it yesterday, Stevie getting down on the drums and the keys, the Mahalia & Mavis moment and the Sly and the Family Stone segments were the highlight for me.
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TrivialPursuit said: You know, it really peeved me when I heard about the Summer of Soul. White American continues to erased Black culture. Never, in 53 years of life, have I ever heard about Summer of Soul. When I saw a report on CBS Sunday Morning about it last week, I was just stupified. How did we never hear about this?!?! This was huge! Word | |
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This was GREAT stuff, some of it had me in tears.
Their is actually some 48 hours of concert material so I guess that will make a DVD at some point.
The one performance that actually surprised me was the Pips. I've never seen them get down like that. Damn......that was nice. Mahalia & Mavis was tear jerker as well. Very nice.....
A great mix of history & music. A Must see in my opinion. FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent. | |
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I think Questlove should try to find these and get them re-released like Disney+ is doing with the new 6 hour version of The Beatles Let It Be called Get Back. He probably has the clout to do so. There is also a 1979 special made for German TV by a guy named Manfred Durniok. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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MickyDolenz said: I think Questlove should try to find these and get them re-released like Disney+ is doing with the new 6 hour version of The Beatles Let It Be called Get Back. He probably has the clout to do so. There is also a 1979 special made for German TV by a guy named Manfred Durniok. I’ve wanted to see “Save the Children “ for decades... I wonder if rights issues have held this in limbo #SOCIETYDEFINESU | |
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SoulAlive said: I wanna see this.I'll definitely buy the blu-ray when it comes out. I’ll be right behind you. I have a home theater surround system and would love to have this on Blu-ray to crank it up #SOCIETYDEFINESU | |
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jjhunsecker said: SoulAlive said: I wanna see this.I'll definitely buy the blu-ray when it comes out. I’ll be right behind you. I have a home theater surround system and would love to have this on Blu-ray to crank it up Yes! They can just take my money now I know that I will really enjoy this. | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
Nothing new...that commenter has a history of that type of commentary..as evidenced by their multiple comments in this thread [Edited 7/9/21 7:55am] | |
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Amazing documentary...the film's commentary about the politics and movements of that era were compelling...the clothes and styles were fascinating...our beautiful black women with their natural hair, no outlandish weaves and wigs and over-sexualized clothes...amazing musical icons in their youth, like Stevie, Gladys & The Pips, BBKing, and The 5th Dimension...i definitely shed tears during The Staples Singers segment...i had forgotten how much i loved Mavis Staples as a little boy... | |
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I lost it during the Mahalia Jackson/Mavis Staples gospel segment too...and im not even a Christian... | |
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There was no displays of coonery, thuggery & aggression, no scantily clad female performers, needlessly and shamelessly exposing their body parts and twerking their cheeks. no "men" sliding down stripper poles and engaging in overt promiscuity with other "men"...just hours of good clean excellence from descendants of Africa. [Edited 7/9/21 8:44am] | |
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RJOrion said: There was no dispays of coonery, thuggery & aggression, no scantily clad female performers, needlessly and shamelessly exposing their body parts and twerking their cheeks. no "men" sliding down stripper poles and engaging in overt promiscuity with other "men"...just hours of good clean excellence from descendants of Africa. It was a time when singing abilities, musicianship, and song craft were valued over spectacle and hype and hysteria #SOCIETYDEFINESU | |
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There was only 3 major TV networks back then (+PBS) and no internet. There was no 24 hour MTV cable channel. There was the National Enquirer though, which was the TMZ/Wendy Williams of that era. Other than a few shows like American Bandstand, Ed Sullivan, Lawrence Welk, & Shindig, music wasn't even on TV much during the 1960s. Then some of that was taped over by the networks at the time, because they saw no future value in music programs. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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S2DG said:
Word...Questlove definitely deserves acknowledgement and awards for the job he did...the way the interviews and archived footage was interspersed with the concert scenes was masterful...i cant wait to watch it again | |
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