On
February 7, 2003, renowned artists across music genres and generations commandeered the stage at
New York City's
Radio City Music Hall to pay tribute to their common heritage and passion: the blues. Shared with thousands of fans in attendance, legendary performers from the roots of rock, blues, jazz, and rap joined forces for a once-in-a-lifetime salute to the blues benefit concert whose proceeds went to musical education.
Executive produced by
Martin Scorcese, produced by
Alex Gibney and directed by
Antoine Fuqua, LIGHTNING IN A BOTTLE captures the night's magic and weaves a history of blues through the juxtaposition of performers, backstage interviews, rehearsals, and archival clips of some of the greatest names in
American music.
Part concert, part history lesson, part summit meeting, and all blues,
Lightning in a Bottle puts a bright spotlight on this quintessential American music. There are some heavy hitters at work here, both behind the camera (
Martin Scorsese executive produced, while the film was directed by Antoine Fuqua of
Training Day and
King Arthur) and especially in front of it, with a superb house band and a mind-boggling array of musicians (including
B.B. King,
Bonnie Raitt,
Aerosmith's
Steven Tyler and
Joe Perry,
Solomon Burke,
Keb' Mo',
Macy Gray, the
Neville Brothers,
Robert Cray, and
John Fogerty, to name but a few) performing at
New York's Radio City Music Hall in
February, 2003. The idea was to trace the music from its beginnings; thus we get an African song (by
Angelique Kidjo), some early gospel blues (the great
Mavis Staples), acoustic
Delta blues, and so on, right up to blues-drenched electric rock and even some rap (a riveting version of
Howlin' Wolf's "
Killing Floor" by
Chuck D.). Virtually all of the immortals who defined the blues (
Robert Johnson,
Muddy Waters, and even
Jimi Hendrix, whose fiery style is re-enacted by
Buddy Guy) enter the picture, either through vintage film clips or new performances of their songs. One might wish for more insight into the influence of the blues on jazz (
Billie Holiday's "
Strange Fruit," sung here by
India.Arie, is a fine song, but it's not a blues tune) or country, but overall, Lightning in a Bottle is an edifying and, most important, highly entertaining portrait of the music and its heritage. There are a few bonus tracks/scenes inserted by production that are not listed below. With that in mind:
Complete List of
Musical Performances
1. "Zélié" (performed by Angelique Kidjo)
2. "See That My
Grave Is
Kept Clean" (performed by Mavis Staples)
3. "
Gamblin' Man" (performed by
David "Honeyboy" Edwards)
4. "
Love In Vain" (performed by Keb' Mo' &
Danny Kortchmar)
5. "
Jim Crow Blues" (performed by
Odetta)
6. "
St. Louis Blues" (performed by
Natalie Cole)
7. "
Sittin' On Top Of The World" (performed by
James "Blood" Ulmer &
Alison Krauss)
8. "
Mama (He
Treats Your
Daughter Mean)" (performed by
Ruth Brown)
9
. "Men Are Like Streetcars" (performed by Natalie Cole)
10. "Can't Be
Satisfied" (performed by Buddy Guy)
11. "Strange Fruit" (performed by India.Arie)
12. "
Hound Dog" (performed by Macy Gray)
13. "
Hear The Angels Singing" (performed by
Larry Johnson)
14. "
Midnight Special" (performed by John Fogerty)
15. "
Okie Dokie Stomp" (performed by
Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown)
16. "
Coming Home" (performed by Bonnie Raitt)
17. "
I'm A King Bee" (performed by Steven Tyler & Joe Perry of Aerosmith)
18. "Killing Floor" (performed by
David Johansen &
Hubert Sumlin)
19. "
I Pity The Fool" (performed by
Shemekia Copeland and Robert Cray)
20. "
Big Chief" (performed by
The Neville Brothers)
21. "
Turn On Your Love Light" (performed by Solomon Burke)
22. "
Red House" (performed by Buddy Guy)
23. "
Voodoo Child" (performed by Angelique Kidjo & Buddy Guy)
24. "
Boom Boom (No War)" (performed by
Chuck D & The
Fine Arts Militia)
25. "
Sweet Sixteen" (performed by B.B. King)
26. "Paying
The Cost To Be The Boss" (performed by B.B. King, Robert Cray & Bonnie Raitt)
- published: 22 Nov 2014
- views: 32513