Indie Focus: 

"The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975," "Thunder Soul": a heady era 
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-ca-indie-focus-20110918,0,7220501.story
 
'The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975' and 'Thunder Soul,' two documentary films, 
use old material to uniquely examine the convergence of culture and politics. 

By Mark Olsen, Special to the Los Angeles Times 

September 18, 2011 
Issues of race and class in the early 1960s are playing out in the multiplex 
right now in the period literary drama "The Help." But two new documentaries 
follow that cultural thread even further forward, using recently unearthed 
archival material to examine historical events in a current context. 

"The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975" is a loosely constructed time capsule 
composed entirely of film footage captured by Swedish news crews during the 
titular era. Director Göran Hugo Olsson uses voice-overs from African American 
artists, activists and scholars — including musicians Ahmir "Questlove" 
Thompson, Talib Kweli and Erykah Badu — reacting to the archival material 
throughout the film, which is available on video on demand and opens in 
theaters in Los Angeles on Sept. 23. 

"Thunder Soul," on the other hand, looks at the transformative heritage of one 
school's music program to emphasize the importance of arts education. In the 
documentary opening in Los Angeles on Oct. 7, director Mark Landsman tells in 
essence two stories: that of Houston's award-winning Kashmere High School Stage 
Band in the 1970s and its dynamic leader, Conrad "Prof" Johnson, alongside the 
reunion of a group of Kashmere alumni for a February 2008 tribute concert as an 
elderly Prof's health was in rapid decline. 

Given the figures who surface in "Mixtape" — activists including Angela Davis 
and Stokely Carmichael — Olsson's film is certainly the more obviously 
political document. The 45-year-old filmmaker was researching another project 
when he uncovered news footage that closely documented the Black Power era in 
the United States and Europe. Much of the material had aired on Swedish 
television at the time and had then been dutifully filed away. 

To give the vintage footage an added contemporary spin, he recruited some key 
figures — Davis, Harry Belafonte , former communications secretary of the Black 
Panther Party Kathleen Cleaver — to record audio commentary responding to 
images of their younger selves. 

"My goal from the beginning was to create something that could be in the 
libraries and universities so that students could have an alternative source of 
trying to describe this time period," Olsson said during a recent interview 
from Stockholm. 

The film hangs together on a timeline that transitions from optimism to 
disillusionment; Olsson tried to maintain a freewheeling structure reminiscent 
of an old-school music mixtape. The approach allowed him to include glimpses of 
Martin Luther King Jr. and Belafonte greeting the king of Sweden, 
schoolchildren chanting in a Black Panther classroom and a young junkie 
chronicling the degradation of her addiction. The images give an overall 
impression of a volatile era. 

Cleaver, who now teaches at Emory and Yale universities, says the documentary 
points out how ideas from that time that once seemed disruptive have since been 
accepted as part of the broader cultural conversation. 

"Power to the people, free medical care, better education, we shouldn't have to 
be subjected to the brutality of the police," Cleaver said. "It wasn't all that 
revolutionary in and of itself, it was just revolutionary when poor black 
people proposed that this is the way the country be changed and then proceeded 
to take measures to change it. That's revolutionary. But the concepts are 
progressive ideas that are not that out of the mainstream of American social 
justice." 

"Thunder Soul" tells a more specific story about the Kashmere band and the 
dedication and influence of Johnson. Coming from an unknown, predominantly 
black high school in Houston, the group would go on to be invited to play in 
Europe and Japan. At the 1972 All- American High School Stage Band Festival in 
Mobile , Ala., the group's bold presence and choice of material was unlike that 
of any other in the competition. Its members broke barriers simply by stepping 
onstage. 

"They might as well have been James Brown appearing on 'The Lawrence Welk 
Show,'" Landsman said. "It's not just that they were an amazing high school 
band that won all these trophies — it's that they did it at a time when an 
all-black band on the white competition circuit was an anomaly. And this in 
itself is a political statement." 

Landsman, a Los Angeles-based filmmaker currently directing episodes of the TV 
documentary series "Intervention," had resigned himself to the fact that he 
might not have footage of the band in its prime and was already editing his 
film when he at last discovered the existence of "Prof and His Band." A short 
made by Houston newsman Charles Porter, that documentary constitutes much of 
the older footage in "Thunder Soul." 

"We struggled a lot with how we were going to tell this story," Landsman said 
during a recent interview in Los Angeles. "I wasn't worried about the 
present-day vérité footage. I knew we were going to get good stuff, but I was 
like 'Where's the motion pictures, what archival material exists?' I researched 
every newsroom in Texas to see if anything existed on this high school band." 

With "Prof and His Band," Landsman found what he needed. In it, the band makes 
plain why it was such a force in its day — the trademark performance style of 
the Kashmere High School Stage Band featured fresh tunes with a modern feel — 
many, Johnson's own compositions — augmented with syncopated dance moves on the 
bandstand. 

It was Landsman's hope that the film's dual story lines would highlight how the 
influence Johnson had on the young people under his tutelage continued long 
after they left school, underscoring the importance of arts education. 

"I knew that the reunion would make it contemporary," Landsman said, "and more 
than that, the issue would bring it forward and make it relevant." 

Bringing the past into the present, both "The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975" 
and "Thunder Soul" put old material to new uses. Each film manages to examine 
the convergence of culture and politics in a fresh way. 

"It's a story each generation is going to have to tell in a new way, to take a 
different approach," said Olsson of reconsidering the Black Power era. "Every 
generation has to do it all the time. The work is not done." 

. 

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