The Commercial Appeal

Documentar­y looks at Jimmy Carter’s links to music

- Patrick Ryan USA TODAY

It's hard not to feel a tad nostalgic watching “Jimmy Carter: Rock & Roll President.”

The new feel-good documentar­y (now available in virtual cinemas and select theaters) is a loving snapshot of the 39th President of the United States, whose warm personalit­y and eclectic music taste made him a favorite among giants such as Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, The Allman Brothers Band, and Johnny and June Carter Cash.

Carter, now 95, was especially fond of Dylan's music. He referenced Dylan's 1965 song “It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)” during his presidenti­al acceptance speech at the 1976 Democratic National Convention. (“I've never had more faith in America than I do today,” Carter said. “We have an America that in Bob Dylan's phrase is busy being born, not busy dying.”)

The elusive folk icon even makes a rare on-screen appearance in the documentar­y, sitting down with the film's director, Mary Wharton, to discuss his friendship with Carter.

“When I first met Jimmy, the first thing he did was quote my songs back to me,” Dylan says. “It was the first time that I realized that my songs had reached into the establishm­ent world. And I had no experience in that realm; I had never seen that side, so it made me a little uneasy. He put my mind at ease by not talking down to me and showing me that he had a sincere appreciati­on for the songs I had written.

“He was a kindred spirit to me of a rare kind. The kind of man you don't meet every day and you're lucky if you ever do.”

Carter recalls how he first met Dylan when he was governor of Georgia from 1971-75. The singer was performing in Atlanta and Carter invited him to the governor's mansion, where the two had a deeply personal conversati­on about spirituali­ty and faith.

“Bob Dylan has been one of my best friends, along with Willie Nelson, of course,” Carter says.

“Probably he and Bob had a lot of good ideas to exchange, because they come from entirely different places,” says Nelson, who is also interviewe­d in the film. “But Jimmy and I basically come from the same spot.”

Nelson has some of the more amusing anecdotes in the documentar­y. In his 2016 memoir “It's a Long Story: My Life,” the country star confessed that he once smoked pot at the White House with a White House staffer.

“That is not exactly true,” Carter says, smiling. “It was one of my sons, but he didn't want to categorize him as a pot smoker like him.”

Later in the film, Nelson recollects another occasion when he visited the White House on crutches.

“I had just been to Jamaica and got busted (for marijuana possession) down there,” Nelson says. “I was so excited to get out of jail I jumped off the porch and sprung my ankle, and then the next day I had to go see the President of the United States. It was really kind of funny. We laughed about it a lot.”

The documentar­y explores in broad strokes how Carter's many musician supporters helped him garner the youth vote in 1976, giving the Democrat the cool edge over his Republican opponent, incumbent President Gerald Ford. Superstars including Diana Ross, Dolly Parton and Crosby, Stills & Nash held court with the president.

“This was the first time young people were kind of in charge,” Jimmy Buffett says. “This was really groundbrea­king when you'd come out of the Nixon era. (The Carter administra­tion) actually liked and listened to rock ‘n' roll, and we weren't just window dressing. When we went to the White House, we were welcomed in.”

 ?? THE JIMMY CARTER PRESIDENTI­AL LIBRARY ?? Jimmy Carter, left, and Willie Nelson at the singer’s concert fundraiser for Carter’s re-election campaign in 1980.
THE JIMMY CARTER PRESIDENTI­AL LIBRARY Jimmy Carter, left, and Willie Nelson at the singer’s concert fundraiser for Carter’s re-election campaign in 1980.

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