***The
Queen Of The 1960s Folk Minute- Joan Baez:
How Sweet The Sound
DVD
Review
From
The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Joan
Baez: How Sweet the Sound, American Master series, PBS, 2009
Several
years ago when I was in a nostalgic mood about the 1960s folk minute, a minute that
influenced my musical tastes when I was a youth, I did a series on female folk
singers titled Not Joan Baez (and also
a male folk singer series with the same idea except that was titled Not Bob Dylan)to try to show that there
were female folk singers around like Judy Collins, Hedy West, Carolyn Hester, Joan’s
sister Mimi (who also sang with her husband Richard Farina) who had talent but
kind of went by the wayside when Joan Baez sucked all the media air out of that
original folk minute (as Dylan did on the male side). Joan from early on became
the folk queen and a look at the old film footage provided in this American
Masters production, Joan Baez: How Sweet
The Sound, rather fittingly details why that was true.
In
the early 1960s many of us were looking for some new musical sensibility, some
new sound once the beautiful days of rock and roll hit a dry spot. Some of us were
also looking for roots, roots music in this case, in those amorphous live-for-the-moment-red
scare cold war times. And starting out Joan Baez spoke to those sentiments
providing all the pathos necessary from the traditional ballads and songs (many
Child ballads so especially filled with pathos) as she made her claim to fame on
the coffeehouse circuit starting in Cambridge at the old Cub 47 back in the day.
And that sound, that almost operatic soprano sound, combined with those ballads
were many time rendered by her with intense haunting beauty as the old footage
here demonstrates. But the folk minute also encompassed song-writing, new
songs, and not just any song-writing but songs written with meaning for a section
of a generation looking for some political direction and that is where the
fortuitous if short collaboration between Baez and Dylan drowned all the other contenders
for the media-driven role of king and queen of folk music. And culminating in
places like the Newport Folk Festival the pair rode the wave.
However
like all cultural waves tastes change, people move on, or in Baez’s case she was
driven as much if not more by the political struggles of the times, black civil
rights in the south and the fight against the military draft and the expanding
war in Vietnam, the defining events of our
generation for many of us. Dylan however could not go, did not want to go in on
that road, or for matter playing second fiddle to anyone and so they split (the
details on this are very sketchy as are the remarks by Baez and Dylan on the
subject). Baez does spend a fair amount of time trying to express the balance between
her music and her social activism. For most musicians this is not a quandary as
music dominates but in her case as the tensions in society exacerbated she was
drawn to the political side especially draft resistance where she met her
future husband, David Harris, and father of her child, Gabriel. Those tensions
followed her throughout her careers.
This
documentary like all American Masters
productions is filled with footage and with “talking heads” to round out the
portrayal. Especially good is the home movie footage from Baez’s childhood
(with scenes with sister Mimi an added attraction),the classic folk scenes at
Club 47 and Newport, her early duos with Dylan, her work with Doctor King for
civil rights down South, her increasing involvement in draft resistance and her
dramatic trip to Vietnam in 1972 when the American government tried (once again)
to bomb that country back to the Stone Age, and her dramatic trip to Sarajevo in
the 1990s while the bombs were raining down
on the civilian population there by the Serbs. As for “talking heads” the
civilized conversation about their marriage with David Harris, the input of son
Gabriel, the comments of Roger McGuinn David Crosby deserve notice. What was
not memorable were the spoken words of Mister Bob Dylan. What else is new from the king of the folk
minute. If you want to get a small slice of flavor of the 1960s from the viewpoint
of one of the better partisans of that moment then this is a worthwhile couple of
hours.
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