Call & Times

Native American musicians prove ready to ‘Rumble’ in lively documentar­y

- By MICHAEL O’SULLIVAN

Like the 2013 music documentar­y "Muscle Shoals," which posited a poetic connection between hit songs and water — in that case, the Tennessee River and the Fame recording studio of Muscle Shoals, Alabama — "Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked the World" also concerns itself with a kind of metaphor- ical musical tributary, albeit one that is not literally wet. Its theme is how Native Americans — their musical style and their musiciansh­ip — have fed the great river of American popular song, from rock to blues, jazz, country and funk.

The film makes its case most eloquently early in the film, when playing a recording by Charley Patton, a blues guitarist and singer who likely has indigenous ancestry. As Tuscarora singer Pura Fé points out the unmistakab­le Indian rhythms and vocal qualities, you might find yourself thinking, "How could I have missed that before?"

This is not dry ethnomusic­ology, however. Rather, co-directors Catherine Bainbridge and Alfonso Maiorana offer brief (only occasional­ly repetitive) profiles of musicians with Native ancestry, several of whom may be widely known.

Half-Shawnee power-chord pioneer Link Wray, for instance — whose 1958 instrument­al hit "Rumble" lends the film its title — is one such guitar hero. But the film also spotlights such Native American musicians as Metallica bassist Robert Trujillo; heavy metal drummer Randy Castillo; blues singer Howlin' Wolf; folk singer Buffy Sainte-Marie; rocker Jimi Hendrix; the soul-singing Neville Brothers; and guitarist Stevie Salas, who is also one of the film's producers.

About a musical genre not known for quiet contemplat­ion, "Rumble" asks us to be still for a moment and to listen to the heartbeat that pumps the lifeblood that flows through the songs this country is known for.

Three stars. Unrated. Contains some strong language, drug references and brief nudity. 102 minutes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States