Pro Tools

Filmfestivals.com + fest21.com merger

 

 

Your twin community sites are merging.

One url for the the best of both worlds: Portal and Social network for the festival community.  
One mission connecting films to festivals.
Enjoy
the most comprehensive festival directory of 6 000 festivals, browse festival blogs, film blogs...

• Register a festival or a film
Submit film to festivals with free service FestivalExpress

My Fest21

Visit as a guest or as a member


Create an account

Who's online

There are currently 0 users and 2477 guests online.

THUNDER SOUL, a review

THUNDER SOUL screened at the 13th Thessaloniki Film Festival last week at the Olympian Theater to an international audience.

Winner of the Pan-African Film festival of Los Angeles 2011, is the documentary film THUNDER SOUL (USA, 2010) about inspiration, heroism, music, the vibrant 70’s and last but not least Thunder Soul… This is the story about a funk/soul band in the 1970s (my favorite decade) that began in the all-American Kashmere highschool, Houston, Texas. This was a time when American whites still held more authority and power within institutions and Afro-Americans still had to constantly deal with racial tension and inequality. There was no less discrimination in school than in the arts and in music.

At a time when American whites had appropriated Jazz as their own, from popular music to highschool bands producing a dry, structured soulless seeming Jazz, along came Professor Conrad Johnson (aka ‘Prof’). ‘Prof’ took it upon himself to turn the dry soulless highschool jazz music into a raging Funk and Soul band that would sweep the nation with its fresh sounds and vivacious energy, nothing of which any other highschool had seen before, not least from a highschool band. The all Afro-American band toured the nation with their funky beats and contagious soul music, winning prizes from several tournaments.

After thirty-five years without playing, the film focuses on a reunion of The Kashmere Stage Band when all the members have gotten older now with families of their own, most of them not having seen each other since highschool. The documentary follows their reunion and their struggle to bring back their now not so thunderous soul (after all the time having gone by) in the attempt to find their band’s mojo and play for ‘Prof’ once again. As the older and wiser reunited band goes through band practice, the film tells us the story through music, photos, newspapers, paraphernalia, of their glorious band’s past and the legacy it left behind. Owing it all to the inspiration and vision of their ‘Prof’ they attempt to play to Conrad Johnson once more before his death.

Near the end of the film, Conrad, ‘Prof’, watches his band play for him 35 years after the band ended, bringing tears to his eyes. With Conrad’s wife gone and the band’s final performance, Conrad died only a few days after the reunion concert on February 3, 2008, an old and accomplished man who touched the lives and inspired so many. The Kashmere Stage Band’s final reunion in the film is during Conrad Johnson’s funeral which is of course an emotional catharsis to a film about a great and visionary man. The final scene is the erection of a bronze statue of ‘Prof’ in front of Kashmere Highschool who will nevertheless continue to move and inspire present generations and future ones.

To read more visit here: http://thundersoulmovie.com/post/440472495/kashmere-stage-band-documenta...

Written by, Vanessa McMahon March 23, 2011

The Kashmere Stage Band with their music instruments in the 1970's

Conrad 'Prof' Johnson in 70's introduces his highschool band.

 

No votes yet

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <p><b> <br> <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <img> <h1> <h2> <h3> <h4> <h5> <h6> <div> <span> <embed> <param> <object> <script><i><b><u>
  • Insert Google Map macro.
  • Images can be added to this post.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Copy the characters (respecting upper/lower case) from the image.

Tags for THUNDER SOUL, a review

About Thessaloniki

Mcmahon Vanessa

Vanessa McMahon Covered the 13th and 14th edition.
Catherine Esway has covered the 12th edition of Thessaloniki Documentary Festival
Cécile Rittweger covered the  11th Thessaloniki Documentary Festival
Christine Marik's reported from 49th Thessaloniki International Film Festival
Past coverage from the 10th Thessaloniki Documentary Festival.

Through its tributes, it focuses both on discovering filmmakers with a unique cinematic point of view, and on the internationally recognized for their contribution to documentary.

Contributions from Buno Chatelin

http://tdf.filmfestival.gr/default.aspx?lang=en-US&loc=6&page=760


Athens

Greece


View my profile
Send me a message

User images

gersbach.net