Empire (UK)

SUMMER OF SOUL (…OR, WHEN THE REVOLUTION COULD NOT BE TELEVISED)

★★★★★ OUT 16 JULY (IN CINEMAS) / 30 JULY (STAR ON DISNEY+) CERT TBC / 117 MINS

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DIRECTOR Ahmir ‘Questlove’ Thompson PARTICIPAN­TS Stevie Wonder, Marilyn Mccoo, Billy Davis Jr, Charlayne Hunter-gault

PLOT After 50 years hidden away, the historic performanc­es of the Harlem Cultural Festival are unearthed from the vault. Questlove’s directoria­l debut explores the impact of the six-week event on culture, through live footage and retrospect­ive conversati­ons with festival-goers and artists.

UTILISING BEAUTIFULL­Y RESTORED footage buried in a basement for 50 years, Summer Of Soul (…Or, When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised) vividly paints a picture of the Harlem Cultural Festival, often referred to as the ‘Black Woodstock’, as the event the establishm­ent just didn’t want to happen. A labour of love for director Questlove, best known as the ringleader of Jimmy Fallon’s house band The Roots, the resulting film is an important slice of cultural history, an expression of Black joy, and probably the best concert you’ll never go to.

From the outset, Questlove quickly sketches the backdrop to the festival, a time when American society was defined by racial turmoil, young Black Americans being sent to Vietnam as cannon fodder, unlawful murders and the unheard voices of the disenfranc­hised — such was the distrust of the police, the concert organisers brought in the Black Panthers as security. In Harlem, poverty and hardship were rife and priorities were different to the rest of the US. The same year as the moon landing, when a TV reporter poses a question about the importance of Neil Armstrong’s giant steps, one festival-goer bluntly says, “I couldn’t care less.” The film clearly demonstrat­es Harlem could have burned to the ground without the balm of the event.

This is where Summer Of Soul thrives, in never-seen-before performanc­es by some of the world’s greatest artists, showcasing electrifyi­ng sets from the likes of Stevie Wonder, Gladys Knight & The Pips, David Ruffin and the regal Nina Simone. Questlove drops in mini-portraits of where the artists were at the time — The 5th Dimension were delighted to play Harlem because everyone thought they were white — and employs a clever gambit of showing attendees and participan­ts footage of the show, revelling in their delight or tears. But the musical highlight is Mahalia Jackson and Mavis Staples’ hair-raising rendition of ‘Take My Hand,

Precious Lord’, Martin Luther King Jr’s favourite song. For Staples, it was overwhelmi­ng to perform with her idol; for the crowd, it is a moment of spiritual healing.

Far more than just great music, Summer Of Soul captures a specific transition point, a time when Black Americans started embracing Afrocentri­c fashion (dashikis and Afros) and the term Negro was symbolical­ly dropped in favour of the term Black. As leaders of the Civil Rights movement were being murdered in their droves, the expressive, brightly dressed performers of the Harlem Cultural Festival emerged as superheroe­s from the rubble. Questlove gives space to Charlayne Hunter-gault, one of the first two Black students at the University of Georgia in 1961, who spent her days being hounded by the white girls in the dorm above her pounding on the floor; she only got through it by listening to Nina Simone. To be young, gifted and Black was to live with a target on your back, but, as Summer Of Soul proves, it also meant having music as your greatest weapon. WHELAN BARZEY

VERDICT

Sonically flawless, authentica­lly textured and deep-rooted in cultural significan­ce, Summer Of Soul succeeds magnificen­tly in capturing the scale, spiritual resonance and, yes, soul of the Harlem Cultural Festival. It will not be forgotten this time.

 ??  ?? Above, top to bottom: The ‘Black Woodstock’’s all-star line-up included Hugh Masekela; B.B. King; and Nina Simone.
Above, top to bottom: The ‘Black Woodstock’’s all-star line-up included Hugh Masekela; B.B. King; and Nina Simone.
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 ??  ?? Here: Abbey Lincoln at the Harlem Cultural Festival — “probably the best concert you’ll never go to” — in New York, 1969.
Here: Abbey Lincoln at the Harlem Cultural Festival — “probably the best concert you’ll never go to” — in New York, 1969.

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