Recent events in Missouri have brought back painful memories for many of the brutal treatment of protestors by police during the Civil Rights Movement. Others see specters of the riots in cities like Detroit, Washington, DC, and the beleaguered Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles in the wake of Martin Luther King Jr.âs murder. These are battles we would like to think belong to the past, but in remembering them, we should also remember peaceful expressions of solidarity and nonviolent responses to persistent social injustice. One such response came in the form of a massive concert at the L.A. Coliseum put on by Memphisâ Stax records in 1972, seven years after the Watts riots. Featuring some of Staxâ biggest namesâIsaac Hayes, Albert King, The Staples Singers, and moreâthe Wattstax music festival brought in more than 100,000 attendees and raised thousands of dollars for local causes, becoming known informally as the âblack Woodstock.â
The idea came from West Coast Stax exec Forrest Hamilton and future Stax president Al Bell, who hoped, he said, to âput on a small concert to help draw attention to, and to raise funds for the Watts Summer Festivalâ as well as âto create, motivate, and instill a sense of pride in the citizens of the Watts community.â To make sure everyone could attend, rich or poor, the organizers sold tickets for a dollar each. Rev. Jesse Jackson gave the invocation, leading the thousands of concertgoers in a call-and-response reading of William H. Bordersâ poem âI Am â Somebody.â There to film the event was Mel Stuart, director of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. The resulting documentary, which you can watch at the top of the post, features incredible performances from Staxâ full roster of artists at the time (see a swaggering Isaac Hayes play âShaftâ above). Despite security concerns from LA officials, still nervous about a gathering of âmore than two black peopleâ in one place, says Bell, the concert was a peaceful and joyously funky occasion: âyou saw the Crips and Bloods sitting side by sideâno problems.â
The film intercuts concert footage with man-on-the street interviews and âtrenchant musingsâ from a then little-known Richard Pryor, who offers âsharp insight into the realities of life for black Americans, circa 1972.â Itâs a moment of âget-down entertainment, raised-fist political rally, and stand-up spiritual revivalâ characteristic of the post-Civil Rights, Vietnam era movement, writes the PBS description of Wattstax. Unfortunately, the documentary âwas considered too racy, political, and black to receive wide theatrical release or television broadcastâ despite a ânotedâ Cannes screening and a 1974 Golden Globe nomination. Itâs been a cult favorite for years, but deserves to be more widely seen, as a record of the hope and celebration of black America after the rage and despair of the late-60s. The messages of Wattstax still resonate. As Bell says, âforty years later, I hear African Americans in the audiences reacting the same scenes, the same way they did forty years ago.â
Wattstax will be added to our collection of Free Documentaries.
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Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness
Wattstax Documents the “Black Woodstock” Concert Held 7 Years After the Watts Riots (1973) is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
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Wattstax Documents the âBlack Woodstockâ Concert Held 7 Years After the Watts Riots (1973)
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