Free Download Of Deep Blus: A Musical Pilgrimage to the Crossroads Online
Sunday, May 31st, 2009Have you seen Deep Blus: A Musical Pilgrimage to the Crossroads? It is by far the most staggering movie I have seen with Big Jack Johnson for quite sometime!
Jack Owens (II) is also very startling in Deep Blus: A Musical Pilgrimage to the Crossroads. It was miraculous to watch Big Jack Johnson and Jack Owens (II) act together.
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Deep Blus: A Musical Pilgrimage to the Crossroads also stars Big Jack Johnson, Jack Owens (II), Roosevelt Barnes, Junior Kimbrough, Lonnie Pitchford.
If you would like to watch Deep Blus: A Musical Pilgrimage to the Crossroads right now you can with the link below:
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This superb documentary vividly illustrates the enduring vitality of country blus, an idiom that most mainstream music fans had presumed dead or, at best, preserved through more scholarly tributes when filmmaker Robert Mugge and veteran blus and rock writer Robert Palmer embarked on their 1990 odyssey into Mississippi delta country. What Arkansas native and former Memphis stalwart Palmer knew, and Mugge captured on film, was that the blus was not only alive but still intimately woven into the daily lives of rural blacks.
Palmer, a former rock musician and Memphis Blus Festival cofounder best known for his bylines in The New York Times and Rolling Stone, had already chronicled the saga of Southern blus in his seminal book that provides the film’s title. He’s an astute guide, and Mugge underlines this role by pairing him with British rocker Dave Stewart (Eurythmics), whose avid interest in the music makes him an effective foil.
The film’s real triumph, however, rests in the team’s success in capturing modern day blus survivors and inheritors playing in the bars, juke joints, and barns of delta country. Palmer, who had returned several years earlier to the delta to capture these artists for his scrappy Fat Possum label, introduces us to the now-amplified but still elemental blus of R.L. Burnside, the late Junior Kimbrough, Jessie Mae Hemphill, Roosevelt “Booba” Barnes, and other keepers of the faith. Mugge, whose profiles of Al Green, Sonny Rollins, and other musicians probed their cultural and artistic contexts with intelligence and sensitivity, captures both the music and the milieu in crisp color footage. Deep Blus thus triumphs as a testament to the blus’ deep roots and an unintentional eulogy for Palmer, who would pass away in the mid-’90s just as the gut-bucket music of Burnside and Kimbrough served notice that the blus were alive and kicking. –Sam Sutherland
Here is a strange preview of Deep Blus: A Musical Pilgrimage to the Crossroads:

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