9 p.m. and runs for 8 weeks in that slot. The Blues Divas documentary was Directed and Produced by Robert Mugge. Executive producer, Ty Warren. With: Morgan Freeman, Irma Thomas, Odetta, Mavis Staples, Deborah Coleman, Bettye LaVette, Ann Peebles, Renee Austin, Denise LaSalle.
This is about the 2-hour theatrical release shown at the 2005 Crossroads Film Festival:
Eight fabulous femmes strut their substantial stuff in "Blues Divas," newest in a long line of joyous music-themed docus from director Robert Mugge. The tangy fruits of helmer's recent alliance with Mississippi's Foundation for Public Broadcasting and his new Blue M shingle, work's varied assemblages as eight hour-long tube programs (one per diva), single-artist DVDs and the theatrical feature caught here ensures fest coverage, small-screen play and brisk business in a variety of formats.
Straightforward doc opens with brief intro from thesp and enthusiast Morgan Freeman, whose Clarksdale juke joint Ground Zero Blues Club hosted festivities and Mugge's high-def crew over a three-day weekend in spring 2004. The actor's laid-back and often adulatory chats with
the talent punctuate uncut numbers performed in front of 50 or so racially diverse patrons on a stage brightly lit to emphasize the graffiti and gig posters on the walls.
From the religious fervor of Mavis Staples to the defiant raunch of Denise LaSalle, perfs are uniformly strong, as each act gets at least one tune and some as many as three. Vet Irma Thomas shouts her way through Otis Redding's "I've Been Loving You Too Long," after which the self-deprecating humor of singer-storyteller Odetta lends added bite to Leadbelly's "Beourgeois Blues."
Staples' self-described "nice grunt" gives oomph to late-dad Roebuck's arrangement of "Will the Circle Be Unbroken," followed by guitar slinger Deborah Coleman's blazing sprint through Koko Taylor's signature "I'm a Woman" as Stevie Ray Vaughan's image gazes down from
the wall.
During Bettye LaVette's fiery "Serves Him Right," the soul survivor cracks up a member of Mugge's crew with mid-song growl "he can go to hell for all I care." The energy level dips slightly during Ann Peebles' perf, though garish outfits sported by the thrush and her
motley-looking nine-piece band can't detract from the haunting vibe of her 1973 hit "I Can't Stand the Rain."
Relative newcomer Renee Austin's slinky "Fool Moon" provides a blessed calm before the storm that is LaSalle's rampage through a sweaty set-list capped by the inevitable "Still the Queen."
As has become Mugge's trademark, a more visceral visual approach to the tech package replaces surface slickness prevalent in similar recent docus such as "Lightning in a Bottle." Not that there's anything wrong with that; throughout an illustrious quarter-century career dating back to 16mm docus on George Crumb, Sun Ra, Al Green, Ruben Blades, Sonny Rollins and many others, Mugge's movies have been more about the combustible mix of forceful personalities and powerful music than surface gloss. Sound mix on the vivid DV tape projected was punchy and full.
Camera (color, HDCam), Stanley Graham, Earnest Seals, Adam Daniel, Eris Wilson, Randy Kwan, Kenneth Sullivan, Darryl Moses, Randy Tinney, Jeremy Burson; music, Big Mo Recording; art director, Karen Wing; sound, John Busbice.