Rhythm, Love and Soul

This live DVD serves as the companion to the highly successful PBS concert pledge special and CD box set. This event captures the greatest R&B performers and their music in a truly unforgettable live setting. Rhythm, Love & Soul is another great success from the American Soundtrack series of shows produced by Pittsburgh PBS station WQED, and Shout! Factory’s Richard and Garson Foos. Comes in 5.1 surround sound or pristine PCM stereo. Includes 3 songs from Aretha Franklin in a rare TV appearan

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Sweet Soul Music: Rhythm and Blues and the Southern Dream of Freedom

This masterful exploration of American roots music–country, rockabilly, and the blues–spotlights the artists who created a distinctly American sound, including Ernest Tubb, Bobby “Blue” Bland, Elvis Presley, Merle Haggard, and Sleepy LaBeef. In incisive portraits based on searching interviews with these legendary performers, Peter Guralnick captures the boundless passion that drove these men to music-making and that kept them determinedly, and sometimes almost desperately, on the road.

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6 Replies to “Rhythm, Love and Soul”

  1. 11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Very Pleased, January 30, 2004
    By 
    Mindy “Mindy” (Baltimore, MD United States) –

    This review is from: Rhythm, Love and Soul (DVD)
    This was an excellent, excellent performance. I totally enjoyed it from the beginning to the end. All of the performers were excellent. If I could change anything on this concert, I would allow Blue Magic and The Manhattans as well as the other performers to sing more of their hits. I am very excited about this concert and can’t wait to have friends in so they can enjoy it with me. This concert was very well done. Thank you.

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  2. 11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Great but what about Vol.2?, April 19, 2004
    By 
    Blaise SCHMITTER (Paris France) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Rhythm, Love and Soul (DVD)
    Fantastic program with outstanding performances that can put to shame any of the younger acts we see on TV daily…
    Now they can see what true talent and great singing is about…
    Thanks PBS for putting together such a great show with a great orchestra too…
    Now I saw that program when it was aired and it was longer (including performances by Chic, The Trammps and many more), and the title of this DVD says Vol.1… so there’s gotta be a Vol.2 in the pipe… Please don’t make us wait too long!!!
    I’m already in line with my credit card…
    Wonder B

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  3. 7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Fantastic Soul, October 12, 2003
    By 
    C. A. Ingram “carlanthony” (Solihull, West Midlands England) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Rhythm, Love and Soul (DVD)
    I have been waiting for this to be released having seen it on PBS Television,this is definetly a must buy for soul fans and lovers of great live performances.This video serves as a tribute to the late great Edwin starr his performance is Stunning,as are all the other performances.Fantastic to see Blue Magic and The Manhattans featuring Gerald Alston.Can’t speak highly enough about this dvd.Please PBS keep up these concerts before these truly amazing artists disappear and we loose the opportunity to witness their art.

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  4. 28 of 28 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Labor of Love, April 2, 2004
    By 
    Tyler Smith (Denver, CO United States) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: Sweet Soul Music: Rhythm and Blues and the Southern Dream of Freedom (Paperback)
    Like Robert Palmer’s superb “Deep Blues,” Guralnick’s extensive look back at the roots of R&B and soul music combines criticism, biographical profiles and social history into one rich, printed tapestry. Meticulously researched, the book shows its author’s deep love of the music without sacrificing objectivity.
    Guralnick provides plenty of background on the “race music” that spawned R&B and the great soul music of the sixties and early seventies, on which much of the book concentrates. Like most, if not all, of the great blues musicians, the early pioneers of soul came from humble, mostly southern beginnings, and made little or no money from their work, which was liberally sampled by white musicians.
    A good portion of the narrative revolves around the fascinating rise and fall of Stax Records, the tiny Memphis-based label that brought together white executive leadership and musicians with raw black talent from the South. Despite initially primitive recording conditions, Stax developed into a powerhouse that was home to some of the greatest musicians in soul music, from Otis Redding to William Bell to Carla Thomas to Sam and Dave to Johnny Taylor. The label became representative of the growing sense of black pride that defined the era, one in which civil rights, of course, moved to the forefront of America’s consciousness.
    All of these musicians and many more, including Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett and James Brown, to name a few, are given finely drawn profiles by Guralnick, and he treats their contributions to American music with the respect that they deserve. Throughout, he is intent on letting the artists tell their stories in their own words, and remains content to use his own fine writing to direct and bind together the narrative.
    Another great accomplishment of the book, for me, was Guralnick’s successful effort to illuminate the ties between white and black musicians during this period. Yes, many of the most successful producers, notably Atlantic’s Jerry Wexler, were white, but so were many of the musicians. Most had grown up in the south around blacks and were intimately familiar with African-American music. The Stax house band, which included Steve Cropper and Donald Dunn, was white, and they performed on many songs penned by great black songwriters such as David Porter and Isaac Hayes. Think of the great, ominous organ introduction to Aretha Franklin’s “I Ain’t Never Loved a Man.” The white player is Spooner Oldham. This musical cross-fertilization is a notable point, one not often brought into considerations of the era.
    As a young kid coming up in the mid-60s, I loved the music that Guralnick writes about here, and I could tell — even if he hadn’t said so — that he did too. He goes beyond that love to really dig into its roots and understand it, and succeeds admirably.

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  5. 38 of 46 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    I Think the Book Ends Before its Climax, August 26, 2000
    By 
    Peter Bridgman (London United Kingdom) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Sweet Soul Music: Rhythm and Blues and the Southern Dream of Freedom (Paperback)
    ‘Sweet Soul Music’ is a fantastic book, the best book I’ve read on the subject. Having said that, it isn’t by any means a complete history of Soul Music (it completely omits the great music that came from New York, Motown, Chicago and Philly), nor is it a complete history of Southern Soul Music (the book ends with the acrimonious break up of Stax/Volt records, even though great Soul was still being made elsewhere in Memphis). Guralnick’s book starts off looking like a history of Soul Music (there are early chapters on Ray Charles, Sam Cooke, and an amazing and hilarious chapter on Solomon Burke), but then the book changes emphasis and becomes the story of the involvement of white musicians in Southern R&B.
    Guralnick’s thesis seems to be that Southern Soul achieved its great creative flowering in the 60s as a result of the partnership between black and white musicians, and even though he interviews a great number of musicians and businessmen – black and white – he can’t help himself from empathising with the young white hipsters that made up the house bands at Stax and Muscle Shoals, with the result that the book becomes very much a story told from their point of view (Guralnick calls Dan Penn the “secret hero of this book” – fair enough, but surely James Brown should have been its overt hero). After these white musicians were intimidated out of the business during the racial tension that followed Martin Luther King’s assassination in 1968, Guralnick concentrates more on the politics and seems to lose interest in the music itself.
    Which is a great pity, since Southern Soul in the 70s went on to even greater heights (James Brown’s rhythmic revolution, then Al Green’s great synthesis of the sexual and the spiritual). Though I learnt a great deal from the book (my CD collection has mushroomed after reading it) it felt to this reader as though the book had ended just before its real climax.

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  6. 7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Almost as good as Guralnick’s Elvis book., December 5, 1998
    By 
    Could Be “You” (somerville, usa) –

    This review is from: Sweet Soul Music: Rhythm and Blues and the Southern Dream of Freedom (Paperback)
    And that’s about as good as books on music get. The stories of minor and supporting character’s are given air in Mr. Guralnick’s books and that is what sets them apart. As a fairly serious follower of American music it is a treat to have a writer who obviously loves his subject (and has similar tastes to me) choose to write at some length about people like Dan Penn, Solomon Burke and James Carr. That he does so in such a poignant yet unforced way is just icing on the cake. This is more than a history of Southern soul music. It’s an exciting and surprising story of real people who created some real extraordinary music.

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