The Mercury News Weekend

Native Americans rock it in ‘Rumble’

- By Michael O'Sullivan The Washington Post

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” concerns itself with the ways Native Americans’ musical styles and musiciansh­ip have fed American popular music, from rock to blues, jazz, country and funk.

The film makes its case most eloquently 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. Rather, co-directors Catherine Bainbridge and Alfonso Maiorana offer brief and only occasional­ly repetitive profiles of musicians with native ancestry, several of them widely known.

Half- Shawnee powerchord pioneer Link Wray, for instance — whose 1958 instrument­al hit “Rumble” lends the film its title — is one of them. Other Native American musicians spotlighte­d include 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.

The 1970s pop group Redbone, which was known for performing in clothing inspired by traditiona­l Native garb, sometimes opened their TV appearance­s with an Indian dance before breaking into one of their hits. The group’s song “Come and Get Your Love” experience­d renewed attention in 2014, when that 1973 hit was featured in “Guardians of the Galaxy.” But how many people who hear that toe-tapping song today can identify the Indian music that courses through it?

About a musical genre not known for quiet contemplat­ion, “Rumble” asks us to be still for a moment and listen to the heartbeat — at once familiar and newly strange — that pumps the lifeblood flowing through songs this country is known for.

 ?? BRUCE STEINBERG— KINO LORBER ?? Link Wray is featured in “Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked the World.”
BRUCE STEINBERG— KINO LORBER Link Wray is featured in “Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked the World.”

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