“The Hardest Working Man
In Show Business”- “Mr. Dynamite”-The James, Please, Please, Please Brown Story
(2014)-A Documentary Review Of Sorts
DVD Review
By Josh Breslin
Mr. Dynamite: The Rise Of James Brown, starring James Brown, the Famous Flames, and
others, 2014
No question I wanted to do this
documentary evaluation of the life and times of the “godfather of soul” James
Brown who came all surly and cocky out of Augusta, Ga around the middle third
of the 20th century and had to fight off Sam Lowell, the former
chief film editor here and now something of an emeritus although such
designations are frowned upon under the new dispensation of one site manager
Greg Green. The reason that I wanted to do this review though is probably not
exactly what the reader would think-the place of a man, a black man in the
history of rock and roll, of soulful rock, and his effect on young white guys
who came up dirt poor in places like North Adamsville and Carver, Ma and Olde Saco
up in Maine without the racial harassment part that James suffered growing up
in the redneck, white supremacist Southern non-hospitality. Maybe say three or
four years ago I might have centered on those points and only made some pointed
but passing reference to his shameful treatment of women throughout his life.
But in the age of #MeToo that is hardly
an adequate way to treat his life. The problem, a problem Sam Lowell first
brought up a couple of years ago when he did an Alfred Hitchcock film review is
exactly what one, no, what a male reviewer, or maybe any reviewer is supposed
to do about some kind of balance between whatever cultural meaning any performer
from acting to painting and everything in between has on society and the
personal life factors where the power balance is askew. I cannot help but in
the back of my mind in the case of James Brown be aware that his art, however
much honored and historically relevant, is decisively marred by his personal
hostilities and actions toward women.
James Brown came up from the dirt down
in Augusta, Ga from a family setting that was not good. He “escaped” via music
first through the gospel traditions which a number of musicians from his
generation and a little later were grounded in. Later moving “uptown” to rhythm
and blue he latched onto various groups which would evolve into the Famous
Flames and form the core of back-up bands under various names for most of his
early career. The big breakthrough hit was Please,
Please, Please in 1956 which had enough sexual energy and innuendo to become
something like an anthem for the post-World War II baby boomer generation which
was in many ways trying to break out of the many-sided box they had been raised
in from sex to patriotism. After that it was more a question of refining his
music to ride with the times for a while as long as rock and roll had some energy
left. Subsequently he moved on to become, well, the Godfather of Soul, the
precursor of funk that had its heyday before hip hop nation emerged in the 1980s,
No question James Brown on a professional musical basis deserved all the awards
and honors he received all the way up to induction in the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame.
To show how the contradictions worked James
Brown also created many songs headed by I’m
Black and Proud which became something of an anthem itself although he disclaimed
the publicly accepted militant sense of the song. He also went against the black
stream politically hanging out with weirdo Republicans like Nixon and Reagan.
He fired band members for using drugs yet he had his own drug jones, was practically
a junkie. The list of number of allegations of domestic violence is staggering and
in the end would do him in. His claim to fame that he chilled the crowd at a
concert in Boston when Doctor Martin Luther King was assassinated seems rather
an exception to his life although no question he did keep violence epidemic elsewhere
down in that town. Maybe it is best to say today in 2018 that like a lot of other
men whose cultural talents are unquestioned James Brown carries the sins of his
times heavily on his back. That is the best I can do here since he will be
among the exhibits of how primitive we were when societies evolve beyond
sexism, sexual abuse, domestic abuse, racism, classism and all the other oppressions
which hold back humankind.
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