2 reviews
What I love about Les Blank is his obsessive nature to cover all the aspects of his subject. While at a seminar with Les, I heard him comment that in making this movie, he wanted to make the definitive Cajun/Zydeco music movie. He accomplished everything he hoped for. The movie starts with the acknowledgment that Cajun and Creole is not one defined group of people. The collection of people known as Cajun began when the Acadians moved out of Canada and found home in the deep south among free slaves and other Europeans. The roots of Cajun and Zydeco music is Gaelic, with heavy drones, usually played on stringed and reeded instruments. Today's Cajun/Zydeco music has witnessed many changes since its beginning, conforming to the popular trends of American pop music, country music, and even rock and roll. The introduction of the accordion was another major change to the Cajun/Zydeco sound. Alongside the change in sound was featured the change in the music's stars. Many of the genre's major artists are featured in this documentary, including but not limited to Mark and Anne Savoy and the Savoy Family Band, Lawrence Ardoin And His French Zydeco Band, Clifton Chenier The King of Zydeco, Michael Doucet, and Joe Falcon. And, even during the aftermath of a devastating segregation war between blacks and whites in the United States, Les Blank was able to capture both the black and white perspective of Cajun/Zydeco music with interviews from both sides of the dividing line. Fortunately today, that line has been heavily blurred and racial tensions have been lifted. After watching this film, I was enlightened to the rich cultural heritage of Cajun and Zydeco music. It was like watching a text book of information on a big screen.
Special thanks to Les Blank, Cece Conway, and the Open Apperture Short Film Festival for hosting the Les Blank retrospective seminar on the campus of Appalachian State University.
Special thanks to Les Blank, Cece Conway, and the Open Apperture Short Film Festival for hosting the Les Blank retrospective seminar on the campus of Appalachian State University.
"I Went to the Dance" ("J'ai été au bal") is an enjoyable documentary exploring the roots of Cajun and Zydaco music. I always thought they were one in the same, though the film taught me plenty...including how Cajun and Zydaco music are not exactly the same. However, despite all my learning while watching the film, the most important part to me was simply listening to the music...and I couldn't help but tap my feet and snap my fingers as I listened. It's just VERY infectuous music and it might just make you a fan as well.
I think it's a well made film...and it's chock full of great music, clips, modern interviews and the like. The movie was possibly shown on "American Experience", as I downloaded many episodes of the great PBS show and this was among them...though on IMDB it doesn't say if it was shown there or not.
I think it's a well made film...and it's chock full of great music, clips, modern interviews and the like. The movie was possibly shown on "American Experience", as I downloaded many episodes of the great PBS show and this was among them...though on IMDB it doesn't say if it was shown there or not.
- planktonrules
- Sep 4, 2024
- Permalink