Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Upcoming music documentar­y slate has something for all fans

- By Katie Walsh

The remainder of the year promises an embarrassm­ent of riches of streaming music documentar­ies. From some of the biggest bands and albums of all time, to more niche interests, there’s a wealth of material coming to streaming services this November and December, so here’s a list of the best rockumenta­ries to stream.

Just in time for your Thanksgivi­ng viewing, director Peter Jackson will unleash six hours of restored footage of the Beatles recording “Let it Be” over the course of three nights, starting Nov. 25 on Disney+. “The Beatles: Get Back” is a three-episode miniseries edited from restored footage that was recorded for Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s 1970 doc “Let It Be” (the working album title was “Get Back”). Created with the cooperatio­n of the surviving Beatles, Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, as well as the widows and children of John Lennon and George Harrison, “The Beatles: Get Back” covers 21 days in the studio of rehearsal for the album, concert and film, and ends with a 42-minute rooftop concert.

The documentar­y “Jagged,” directed by Alison Klayman, is a deep dive into another massive, culture-changing album, Alanis Morissette’s “Jagged Little Pill.” After premiering at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival, “Jagged” has now arrived on HBO Max, kicking off a month of rock docs as a part of the Music Box Series on HBO Max, produced by The Ringer honcho Bill Simmons and his Ringer Films imprint, which previously debuted “Woodstock 99: Peace Love and Rage” on HBO

Max over the summer.

“Jagged” follows the phenomenon that is the bestsellin­g rock opus “Jagged Little Pill.” In interviews in the film, Morissette is charming and radiant, and Klayman has crafted a beautiful and nuanced portrait of this album, and Morissette’s meteoric rise to fame in the mid-1990s. Unfortunat­ely, Morissette has subsequent­ly disavowed the film for including references to potential sexual abuse that may have occurred when she was teen pop star in Canada. Neverthele­ss, for those who came of age with “Jagged Little Pill,” the film is a gorgeous and nostalgic musical trip.

Four more music docs will bow on HBO Max every week through November and December, including, “Don’t Try to Understand: A Year in the Life of Earl ‘DMX’ Simmons,” directed by Chris Frierson and premiering Nov. 25, following the late rapper as he attempts to rebuild his life after being released from prison in 2019. On Dec. 2, check out Penny Lane’s film “Listening to Kenny G,” about the king of smooth jazz, and on Dec. 9, John Maggio’s doc “Mr. Saturday Night,” about Bee Gees manager and “Saturday

Night Fever” producer Robert Stigwood. Finally, on Dec. 16, the Music Box series wraps up with “Juice WRLD: Into the Abyss” directed by Tommy Oliver, about the young rapper who died far too soon at the age of 21 in 2019.

Now streaming on Apple TV+ is Todd Haynes’ dense, abstract documentar­y “The Velvet Undergroun­d,” about the legendary 1960s New York City rock group. Haynes has quilted this nonfiction portrait out of a wealth of archival footage and interviews, as well as Andy Warhol factory films.

Finally, “The United States of Insanity,” directed by Tom Putnam and Brenna Sanchez, will be available via video on demand Dec. 10. This doc explores the subculture of the Juggalos, the fans of Michigan rap duo Insane Clown Posse, known for their distinctiv­e white and black face paint. The film takes a look at the FBI’s designatio­n of the Juggalos as a gang, and the subsequent legal battle against this label, with the ACLU on board.

From the Beatles to the Insane Clown Posse, there’s a streaming doc for any and all kinds of music fans coming as the year wraps up.

 ?? APPLE TV+ ?? Moe Tucker, from left, John Cale, Sterling Morrison and Lou Reed in “The Velvet Undergroun­d.”
APPLE TV+ Moe Tucker, from left, John Cale, Sterling Morrison and Lou Reed in “The Velvet Undergroun­d.”

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