Posts Tagged ‘Jim Jarmusch’

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The Raconteurs have announced a forthcoming documentary and live album to both titled, “Live At Electric Lady”, with both projects scheduled to arrive this Friday, May 29th.

Live At Electric Lady will document The Raconteurs’ clandestine performance at the iconic New York recording studio in support of the band’s most recent album, 2019’s Help Us Stranger. The EP will be released exclusively to Spotify, and will feature like takes on a catalogue-spanning selection of songs, including a cover of Richard Hell & The Voidoids“Blank Generation”. The documentary, directed by filmmaker Jim Jarmusch, will include video of the live performance, along with interviews with the band and behind-the-scenes footage.

A Facebook post announcing Live At Electric Lady arrived with a one-minute video trailer and a pre-save link for the “special enhanced album.” The trailer offered snippets of artist interviews and the live performance as well as a cameo from Jarmusch, who noted that the Electric Lady is “Kind of a magical, mythical place.”

“Everyone who’s a musician on stage is doing something that they love and they’re trying to share it with someone else,” added frontman Jack White in the trailer. “Some people fall in the trap of it being about authenticity, but I don’t think it’s about that. I think it’s about the attitude of what you did was the best part. Not whether you got all the notes right, but your point of what you were trying to accomplish was evidence to us in the crowd.”

In September 2019, The Raconteurs visited legendary New York City recording studio Electric Lady Studios to record a live EP and interview with Jim Jarmusch in honor of the studios’ 50th Anniversary – exclusively for Spotify. ‘The Raconteurs: Live at Electric Lady’ is a documentary and concert film showcasing the day, including their explosive 7-song live performance

Watch the Live at Electric Lady trailer.

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You might expect this documentary about legendary wild man Iggy Pop made by indie film maverick Jim Jarmusch to be a little more dangerous, but “Gimme Danger” plays it pretty straight. And that’s okay, as Jarmusch offers up this “love letter” to The Stooges, who he calls “The greatest rock and roll band ever.” Featuring interviews with most parties involved, Gimme Danger makes a great case for that, as the film goes from Iggy’s high school days when he was known simply as James Osterberg Jr, to hooking up with Ron and Scott Asheton who created a whole new sound. Or, as Iggy told ’70s daytime talk show host Dinah Shore in an infamous mid-’70s television appearance with David Bowie, “I think I helped wipe out the ’60s.”

The film follows the rise, fall and reunion of the Stooges, formed in Ann Arbor, Michigan in the 1967 by singer Iggy Pop, bassist Dave Alexander, and brothers Ron Asheton and Scott Asheton on guitar and drums respectively. Guitarist James Williamson eventually joined the band, with Ron Asheton switching to bass after Alexander was fired.

The band found little success during the first phase of their career, recording three albums that did not sell as well as their record companies expected, and performing for audiences that were largely indifferent or hostile. They broke up in 1974, and the band members went their separate ways with vocalist Pop establishing a moderately successful solo career. In time, the Stooges proved highly influential on the development of punk rock in the 1970s.

The Stooges’ original lineup reformed in 2003, with bassist Mike Watt replacing the late Alexander. Ron Asheton died in 2009, and Williamson rejoined the band for their fifth and final album.

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Named an Official Selection to the New York, Toronto and Cannes film festivals, Gimmie Danger presents The Stooges story and explores its influences and impact, complete with some never-before-seen footage and photographs. Rhino Records released the perfect complement to the film with GIMME DANGER: MUSIC FROM THE MOTION PICTURE, a 14 track digital compilation that focus on the group’s first three studio albums  THE STOOGES, FUN HOUSE, and IGGY AND THE STOOGES’ RAW POWER, featuring band members Iggy Pop, Ron and Scott Asheton, Dave Alexander, and James Williamson.

“It’s June 9th. We are in an undisclosed location. We are interrogating Jim Osterberg about the Stooges, the greatest rock and roll band ever.” So begins Jim Jarmusch’s affectionate, thorough documentary – a film in which violence is swift and random, household objects are employed during the making of music, Wimbledon provides an unlikely recording location and John Wayne cameos alongside David Bowie, Art Garfunkel and Nico. One anecdote involves a tab of mescalin and a shovel. For the first gig, the singer was made up in white face, wearing an aluminum afro wig and a maternity smock and played a vacuum cleaner on stage. There are drugs, chaos, more drugs. Death, redemption, riffs are all present. As Iggy notes dryly, “It ain’t too easy being the Stooges sometimes, you know?”

Iggy Pop is a predictably charismatic narrator. Around him weave occasional testimonies from bandmates Ron and Scott Asheton, Steve Mackay and James Williamson, as well as latter-day Stooge Mike Watt, A&R man Danny Fields and the Ashetons sister, Kathy. Witty, clear-eyed, self-deprecating, Iggy Pop is capable of delivering golden lines like “In the Ashetons, I found primitive man” as well brilliantly composed, off-the-cuff comments, such as when he relates his experiences as a drummer in Chicago: “I saw a little glimpse of a deeper life, of people who in their adulthood had not lost their childhood”.

Jarmusch traces the band’s evolution from the trailer parks of Ann Arbour, Michigan to their split in 1973 and then reunion in 2003. Needless to say, is a bumpy ride. But Jarmusch is intent on following the music, as much as anything else. The band’s experimental urges – they liked nothing better than turning off the lights and playing Harry Partch recordings – find shape and focus, they travel to New York to work with John Cale on their debut album. The confrontational aspect both of their music and Iggy’s stage presence is well illustrated in vintage clips and photography. Look, here’s Iggy, wearing silver gloves, a dog collar and jeans, throwing himself into the crowd on live TV.

Elsewhere, Jarmusch makes do with contemporaneous library footage and animated passages reminiscent of Julien Temple’s filmmaking technique. Jarmusch keeps the focus on the Stooges – there are many opportunities for digression – and particularly the music to the extent Gimme Danger could benefit from some deeper contextualizing, but nevertheless it is a staggeringly good film. During one archive TV interview, Pop sit nestled next to David Bowie on the sofa of a chat show, and is asked what, if any, does he think his contribution to music has been. “I think I helped wipe out the Sixties,” he drawls.

Iggy Pop and filmmaker Jim Jarmusch to talk about their new documentary ‘Gimme Danger.‘ The film, which has been eight long years in the making, focuses on the legendary rock band, The Stooges, and how they reinvented music as we know it.