Showing posts with label Documentary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Documentary. Show all posts

Sunday, November 27, 2016

'A Fat Wreck,' Documentary Of Punk Label, Set To Come Out On VOD & Blu-Ray/DVD!


Fat Wreck Chords... The influential music label proud to say they've spent the past 25 years "ruining punk rock". A Fat Wreck tells the story of founders Fat Mike (of the legendary punk band NOFX) and his ex-wife Erin Kelly-Burkett, spanning the birth, growth, struggles, and survival of the Fat Wreck Chords label. 

Half inspirational story of chosen family and community, half debauchery and occasionally involuntary drug use...  A Fat Wreck blazes exciting new ground in the cinematic genre of puppet-driven punk rock music documentary filmmaking. If you only see one film featuring a dominatrix spanking a puppet in your lifetime... Make it A Fat Wreck!

To order "A Fat Wreck," visit: http://www.afatwreck.com/

Friday, October 28, 2016

‘We Are X’: Soulful Documentary of Japanese Heavy Metal Band

The band X Japan in the 1980s, as seen in the documentary "We Are X." Photo: Drafthouse Films
As a kid, Yoshiki always wondered if he were from somewhere else — like Mars.

A misfit child scarred by his father’s suicide, Yoshiki, trained in classical music, grew up to become a David Bowie-like man who fell to Earth. He revolutionized heavy metal music in Japan and, still going at 50, is trying to break into the American consciousness.

Stephen Kijak’s documentary “We Are X” is a broad but surprisingly personal portrait of Yoshiki and his band, X Japan, which formed in 1982, broke up in 1997 and re-formed in 2007. The band began a push into the U.S. market about five years ago, and interviews include American friends and fans such as Kiss front man Gene Simmons and Marilyn Manson.

Monday, August 15, 2016

Daughter of Jock Scot Remembers 'Rebellious' Dad Who Could Silence a Crowd With His Words

POPPY Chancellor is among loved ones hailing the musician in a documentary filmed two weeks after he was diagnosed with the cancer that claimed his life. 
IRVINE Welsh and Billy Bragg hail him as a hero. Shane MacGowan was one of his closest friends.
His romances with singer Neneh Cherry and actress Anna Chancellor made gossip columns, as did his friendships with aristocracy.

But few outside of the post-punk music scene know much about poet Jock Scot. Yet his family and friends says his influence on music, literature and the arts was extraordinary.

Friday, June 3, 2016

New documentary chronicles teen metal sensation "Unlocking The Truth"




Breaking A Monster is a music documentary that follows the rise of African American teen heavy metal sensation Unlocking The Truth. Watch as filmmaker Luke Meyer catches the band's fascinating coming-of-age story as they go from playing a combination of heavy metal and speed punk in Times Square to entering a $1.7 million record deal. Check out the new theatrical trailer for the movie below!

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Orphaned Land - All Is One - Documentary

With elements of Eastern, Western and Asian influences in the heavy metal band’s music, Orphaned Land is known for its message of peace and unity among Jews, Arabs and Christians. The band’s songs are in Hebrew and English, and its last album, “All is One,” was produced in Israel, Turkey and Sweden.


 From the All is One bonus DVD. All rights reserved by Orphaned Land.

When the band was first formed in 1991, it was called Resurrection. The group of dark-haired and goateed musicians, which still includes bassist Uri Zelha, has added electric guitarist Chen Balbus, drummer Matan Shmuel and guitarist Idan Amsalem, and is led by the long-haired and tattooed Farhi. 

Monday, February 15, 2016

BBC Music Moguls Masters Of Pop 2 of 3 Melody Makers

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Max Schaaf - This Time - As Featured on Vimeo

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Lenny's Garage - Short Documentary On A Brooklyn, NY Car Collector




"Lenny Shiller is a lifelong Brooklyn resident and classic car collector. He has amassed a staggering 58 rare classic cars, while he also owns hundreds of vintage bikes, motorcycles, and memorabilia. Lenny spends his time restoring and maintaining his collection, with the intention one day to pass them on to the next generation. The walls of his 12,000 sq ft garage in Gowanus are stacked with car parts he has collected over the years, the space resembling part working garage, part museum."

Filmed and edited by Peter Crosby
Music by Salomon Lighthelm
petercrosbyphotography.com
twitter.com/peterbcrosby
pbcrosby@gmail.com

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Colin Hanks Directs Documentary Film About The Rise And Fall of Tower Records

Colin Hanks Directs Documentary Film About The Rise And Fall of Tower Records

"In the first trailer for the Colin Hanks documentary “All Things Must Pass,” we see the events that led to the rise — and eventual fall — of iconic record store chain Tower Records. 

In 1999, Tower Records made $1 billion. In 2006, the company filed for bankruptcy. The documentary charts the store’s rise to prominence as an international chain to the conditions that led to its downfall. 

The film also features interviews with music legends like Elton John, Bruce Springsteen and Dave Grohl. Each shares fond memories of the days when they could walk into Tower Records and immediately connect with staff, who knew everything there was to know about the latest music.

Hanks directed the film, with Steven Leckart serving as writer. Glen Zipper and Nicholas Ferrall executive produced, while Sean M. Stuart produced. The film premiered at the 2015 SXSW film festival. It will debut in theaters on October 16th."

View this story and more on The Wrap

HBO Is Set To Release New Series About A Fictional Record Label From The 1970's, Directed and Conceptualized By Martin Scorcese and Mick Jagger

HBO Is Set To Release New Series About A Fictional Record Label From The 1970's, Directed and Conceptualized By Martin Scorcese and Mick Jagger

Set in 1970s America, Vinyl follows the fictional American Century Records, a label struggling to reinvent itself and capture a new sound. Boardwalk Empire’s Bobby Cannavale plays the record executive, with both Martin Scorcese and Mick Jagger conceptualizing and directing.

As part of the ‘set,’ Scorcese transformed Brooklyn’s Rough Trade record shop into a 1970-era Sam Goody. Perhaps resurrecting a more complicated Tower Records was too tall a task, though Colin Hanks has just released a documentary chronicling the rise-and-fall of the recording industry’s biggest retail outlet.

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Crowbar, Featured On Ghosts Of The Road From FrqsTV on Youtube

Crowbar, Featured On Ghosts Of The Road From FrqsTV on Youtube
FreqsTV is an all-music documentary channel consisting of original programming focused on the hard rock and metal genres. Series include tour documentaries, spotlights on scenes, indie labels and portraits of pioneers in varying genres. Do yourself a favor and check them out.

The home of Rock Documentaries - FrqsTV 
 

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Ralph Steadman - For No Good Reason - Film Trailer

Ralph Steadman has been drawing the world around his chaotic visions for over five decades
Finding talent such as that exhibited by illustration phenom Ralph Steadman is a once in a lifetime type of gift. His pairing of wildly vivid illustrations next to the ramblings of Hunter S. Thompson helped to shape a new era in the American psyche after the hippy movement was winding down. His style of ink and brush left an indelible mark on myself and became an illustrator I constantly sought out refuge in for ideas as I was learning to perfect my craft. Do yourself a favor and find out more about Ralph Steadman and do what you can to watch the new documentary about him.

Check out the original post on Esquire

"A half-hour into my conversation with Ralph Steadman, his cordless phone’s battery gave out and the line went dead. I was surprised it took that long. The battery had been beeping on his end every couple minutes since we’d started talking.

The reason for our conversation was For No Good Reason, the new documentary about Steadman’s life and art that focuses largely on his four decades of collaboration and friendship with Hunter S. Thompson, godfather of Gonzo journalism. We managed to talk a little about that. “I always knew he would commit suicide,” Steadman said of Thompson. “He said to me, ‘I’d feel real trapped in this life, Ralph, if I didn’t know I could commit suicide at any moment.’ He had 23 fully loaded guns at Owl Farm. I don’t know if Anita, his wife, has kept them fully loaded but that’s what he had all the time. He had a thing about guns.” We also touched on his recent painting of Esky, Esquire’s mascot: “I did it in an afternoon. I just covered my hand in ink and slapped it down.” But nearly every time Steadman began to answer one of my questions at any length, his phone’s battery would beep, throwing off his train of thought:

“If you hear that ‘boop-boop-boop,’ it’s noise of the phone battery. If I hear that noise, I’ll repeat what I said a moment before.”

“See, there it did it again. It’s happened again—that ‘beep-beep-beep.’ What? Say that again.”

“Now, did you hear that? See? I didn’t speak just at that moment, cause I knew it would cut it out.”

“If you’d phoned me in the studio, I have the older kind of phone. A Panasonic, but it’s an old one. Curls round your head. Much better than this one, which is flatter against the side of my cheek. I still like the phone. And I still think Alexander Graham Bell is the greater of the inventors than, say, Steve Jobs or Bill Gates. I love that they used to say, ‘I’ll give you a Bell sometime.’ They don’t say, ‘I’ll e-Jobs you.’ That doesn’t seem to work.”

Penned by Hunter S. Thompson and illustrated by Ralph Steadman, Fear and Loathing In Las Vegas was an instant classic

I didn’t mind the constant interruptions. For one, I couldn’t think of much to ask Steadman that hadn’t been answered by the documentary. It’s not surprising that For No Good Reason took director Charlie Paul 15 years to complete. Narrated by Johnny Depp—who became good friends with Steadman after being introduced by Thompson—the film is an exhaustive, exhilarating look at the artist’s career, ranging from the very first drawing courses he took as a teenager with his parents’ encouragement to the iconic illustrations he did for Thompson’s society-shifting novel Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas to his recent work commemorating extinct birds. It even offers a glimpse into Steadman’s home studio in the English countryside, where at age 77 he’s seen splattering, slathering, scraping and even blowing paint into portraits and landscapes as caustic and terrifying and beautiful and necessary as ever. Steadman’s life has been chronicled before, in several documentaries about Thompson as well as in his own 2006 memoir The Joke’s Over. But For No Good Reason—whose title comes from Thompson’s standard response whenever Steadman would inquire as to why they were vandalizing America’s Cup yachts in a New England harbor or searching for elephant tusks in the jungles of Africa or embarking on some other magazine-sanctioned insanity—is the definitive analysis and appreciation his revolutionary output has always deserved.

This is great news for audience members. Not so much for those tasked with interviewing Steadman about the film. Were it not for his phone’s dying battery, my line of questioning would’ve quickly devolved into my own version of “The Chris Farley Show.” Remember that drawing you did for Fear and Loathing where all the people in the casino were lizards? That was awesome. But even more than sparing me this awkwardness, I enjoyed the dying battery situation because it was so perfectly fitting given how integral the telephone was to Steadman and Thompson’s relationship.

It had started with a phone call, after all—and had ended with one, too. That first call came in April 1970, from an editor at Scanlan’s Monthly who asked Steadman to go to the Kentucky Derby and illustrate an article about the race written by Thompson. The last call came 35 years later, in February 2005, when a friend phoned to let Steadman know about Thompson’s suicide. And in between there were the countless calls between the two men themselves—typically in the middle of the night, per Thompson’s famous nocturnality. The sound effect of a ringing phone is used often in For No Good Reason, signaling both awaiting adventure and impending doom. Listening to Steadman apologize and fume over the dying phone battery gave me a genuine sense of what those conversations between him and Thompson must’ve been like.

After the line cut out and I called him back, he answered from a different phone.

“Well, I’m in the kitchen now,” he said. “What I’ve done is, I’ve come in here cause, you see, that other one, that battery, the charge in it was going down. And that’s why we get ‘beep-beep’ and more of that. Now I’m in the kitchen. I’m moving all over the house. I have to to find a phone that works.”
We talked for another twenty minutes or so, about all sorts of things: art (“My great favorites are people like Marcel Duchamp. And Picasso, of course. Picasso was the greatest cartoonist of the 20th century. He just played. There was a tremendous amount of enjoyment in his work.”); real estate (“Our daughter lives here now. Her and her husband. They live in the other half of the house. They have their own section. It’s that big. I bought it for a song, back in 1980. I offered Lord Shannon 75,000 pounds for it—for this mansion, you see. He said, ‘Ho, ho, no, no. I’ve got 75,000 on the table.’ I said, ‘Have you? What’s it look like?’ He said, ‘Ho, ho, having a joke.’ But anyway, we got it for 100,000. Ridiculously cheap. They’re talking about it’s worth millions now.”); his daily routine (“I go for a swim in the morning. I have a pool out back. The only thing I don’t like about it at the moment is the goddamn pigeons around here. You always know they’ve been there and they’ve done something because there’s always a white feather floating in the pool.”); his parents’ longevity (“My father was amazing really. He went on to 93. And my mother, too: she was 90. Somebody once said to my father, ‘You know, Mr. Steadman, I’m 70 today.’ And he said, ‘You bloody look it, too.’ The only thing he noticed about growing older is the undertaker raised his hat to him.”); his advice to young artists (“Get ink. And start defying the computer. Go back to basics.”) and his aversion to technology in general: 

“The computer has taken over—it’s dislodged our lives a tremendous amount. I mean, important people having conversations with an iPhone in their hand. Pushing it around and squeezing the images and so forth. It’s very peculiar, the whole bloody thing. I don’t understand. Really. I’ve been on the train recently and watched a woman opposite me. She gets out her make-up kit and she’s making herself up. And she’s on an iPhone at the same time, fiddling about with that. Twiddling it sideways and twiddling it upright. I think perhaps in another generation or two, we’ll become insensate. We won’t really get that natural feeling of experience, of knowing something happened the way it happens, in reality. We’ll always be doing things second-hand.”

It was one of those interviews you occasionally have as a journalist where you think you’ve made a genuine connection with the subject and that there’s a legitimate chance you might actually be friends with them. Before we hung up, Steadman mentioned he’d be in New York this week for the film’s premiere as well as for his first New York exhibition since 2001, a two-day show sponsored by Flying Dog Brewery (which uses Steadman’s work on its labels) and held at Manhattan’s Red Bull Studio. I’ve thought about stopping by the exhibition’s closing party on Friday night and introducing myself. Yet somehow talking on the phone with Steadman feels more meaningful than meeting in person. Somehow that’s enough—more than enough."


FOR NO GOOD REASON TRAILER from Itch Film on Vimeo.

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

That Time When Billy Don Burns and Billy Joe Shaver Sat Down For A Conversation

Billy Don Burns and Billy Joe Shaver talking for the BDB documentary currently being filmed

A few weeks back we were able to sit down with Billy Don Burns and Billy Joe Shaver for a quick chat for the BDB documentary. Can't tell yall how thrilled we are with the amount of folks asking to go on record and sing praises about Billy Don Burns. True character will always shine through and watching these two chat was akin to watching a great novel unfold. 

Billy Don Burns on Facebook

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Brooklyn Rocksteady, A Film By Sam Gursky

Ska kingpins, The Specials
Ska is one of those genres that I always enjoyed for a few songs, but then grew tired of it quickly and was never sure why. The music was good, the crowds were great, but at the time when I was being dragged to ska shows, I just wasn't in that mind set. Ska always felt like a foreign punk rock to me. 

After watching the new documentary below I felt a unique appreciation for the bands as they are now starting to resonate a bit different in my ever evolving music tastes. The laid back vibes and good times make white boy reggae a bit more palatable and hell, I just may have to dive into some of these bands more often.

Check out Brooklyn Rocksteady


Brooklyn Rocksteady from Samuel Gursky on Vimeo.

"This project took me 2 and a half years to complete. I was naive enough in January of 2011 to think that it would only take me a couple of months, but I have learned that lesson and many more through this production.

The purpose of this film is to shine some light on an incredible community that is often overlooked, so I encourage you to above all share this with anybody who you think may enjoy it.

Your support means the world to me, I kicked the whole thing off with a kickstarter campaign, that $3K got me up and running with this project. In the end, I spent another $5K on top of that to make this into a reality. Any donations/merchandise purchased will of course help me recoup these expenses, which is immensely appreciated, but please don't feel obligated. Watching and sharing is enough for me, that's why I made the film in the first place, for people to (hopefully) enjoy and share!

Any support in the form of donations (via the tip jar above) would also be welcomed and immensely appreciated, but do not feel that it is expected or necessary. If I had made this film with the intentions of recouping the expenses/making money, I'd be that much more naive.

You can also support by buying merchandise from any of the bands, going to their shows and/or by purchasing a t-shirt, dvd or a pay-what-you-want digital download at brooklynrocksteady.com

Also! We love screenings, if you'd like to host one in your town, please get in touch! My email is samgursky@gmail.com and I'd love to come hang out and share my movie!

Thank you all so much for your support, it made this project possible and makes it all feel worth it.

Directed by:

• Samuel Gursky (samuelgursky.com)
Edited by:
• Nick Vannucci (nickvannucci.com)
• Matthew Greenberg (matthewgreenberg.com)
• Nicole Onorato (irvingharvey.com)
Sound Mix by:
• Stephen Murphy (westfallrecording.com)

I owe an immense amount of thanks to everyone who let me ride in their van through this experience as well, we shared in some incredible, awful and really life changing moments that I will never forget.

• Royal City Riot - Jesse Litwa, Matthew Spitz, Anthony Vito Fraccalvieri, Jon Degen, Ata Secilmis & Jared Kaplan.

• The Forthrights - Jack Wright, Sammy Kay, Matt Burdi & Jimmy Doyle. Also! Vic Ruggiero & Chris Murray.

PS: Chris Murray if you read this, I want a re-match for that pizza eating contest."

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

The Metalsmith, From Vimeo

Facing blindness, metalsmith Andy Cooperman renews his commitment to making things worth seeing.

View Andy's work at andycooperman.com
Music: Reflux by In The Nursery (licensed via Vimeo)
Produced by Visual Contact visualcontact.com

BTS info about how this video was lit: danmccomb.com/posts/2800/the-metalsmith/


The Metalsmith from Dan McComb on Vimeo.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Talk About Crazy, The Billy Don Burns Story

Billy Don Burns is a true Country Music Warrior. He wears his battle scars with honor, depicting the stories of his life in his songs with brutal and beautiful honesty. He's respected far and wide for his long career in songwriting and performing, and he's still out there. He's lived it and breathed it through lifetimes of country music passion and pain. Carrying the guitar like a sword on his back, he battles for the Poet. He battles for the Artist. He battles for the souls who defy modern convention. And every time he strikes a chord in some smoke-filled Honky Tonk, he wins. Billy Don Burns started out in this business working with legends, and somewhere along the way he became one himself.

Talk About Crazy, The Billy Don Burns Story is now being shot and filmed with numerous country music luminaries and will be in production for all of 2013.

get in contact with us directly on this project  -  billydonburnsmovie at gmail.com


Original cover photo for Billy Don Burns newest album, photo by Lance Dawes

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Metal Evolution - VH1 Documentary Series

Finally, a great show about Heavy Metal called Metal Evolution and the storied history about where it really came from. VH1, you are alright in our books now and we cannot wait for the Thrash Metal show on December 31st. Our only gripe is that with the series listing, nothing is covered when it comes to Death or Black Metal? C'mon folks, this is a huge area to mine or maybe the suits over at Viacom were a bit nervous about talking to church burners and legions of the damned.

Nov 11: Pre Metal
Nov 19: Early Metal US
Dec 3: Early Metal UK
Dec 10: New Wave Of British Heavy Metal
Dec 17: Glam
Dec 31: Thrash
Jan 7: Grunge
Jan 14: Nu Metal
Jan 21: Shock Rock
Jan 28: Power Metal
Feb 4: Progressive Metal

About Metal Evolution:

Metal Evolution presents 11 episodes based on the much-debated Metal History "family tree" originally shown in Headbanger's Journey. This 24 sub-genre genealogical chart reveals the vast complex progeny of heavy metal--from Early Metal and Shock Rock to Thrash, from Progressive Metal to Grunge and Nu Metal. Using the chart as his road map, our host, metalhead turned anthropologist Sam Dunn, will crisscross the globe in search of the very essence of Metal, from bars and back alleys to the biggest open air festivals.


Get More: Metal Evolution

Some thrash classics...