funk

Thunder Soul

Thunder Soul (Director: Mark Landsman): Winner of the Audience Award at this year’s Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Film Festival, Landsman’s pro­file of the Kashmere Stage Band and its iconic leader Conrad O. “Prof” Johnson wisely keeps the music front and centre. In the early 1970s, Kashmere High School in Houston, Texas was the home of a unique musical exper­i­ment. Music teacher “Prof” Johnson began to incor­porate the funk and R&B music his stu­dents were listening to into the school band’s rep­er­toire in the late 1960s, and a few years later, the all-black band were win­ning com­pet­i­tions all over the United States against other school bands who played mostly “soft jazz” or “big band” music.

About ten years ago, record label owner and funk arch­ivist Eothen “Egon” Alapatt dis­covered some old vinyl LPs the band self-produced strictly for his­tor­ical pur­poses. Working with “Prof” he was able to put out the com­pil­a­tion Texas Thunder Soul 1968–1974 which went on to become a hit, espe­cially among DJs who eagerly sampled the band’s music in their own work.

The film­maker came along just as some mem­bers of the old band were plan­ning a reunion to honour “Prof,” now 92 and in ill health. More than two dozen mem­bers from the band’s most acclaimed period reunited, des­pite the fact that some of them hadn’t played any musical instru­ment in more than 30 years. But as “Prof” boasts in the film, he taught them so well that it would all come back to them, and the climax of the film is the reunited band’s per­form­ance, still fresh and funky after all these years. It’s a tribute to “Prof” but it’s also a powerful doc­u­ment about what arts edu­ca­tion can mean to stu­dents. During the period of the band’s suc­cess, other pro­grams and teams at the school also excelled, and the gradu­ation rate soared.

Sadly, the school’s band now struggles along with just 8 stu­dents and a crim­in­ally small budget. Landsman’s hope for the film is not only to honour mentors like “Prof” but to advocate for better funding of arts edu­ca­tion in the public schools. His job is made easier by the sheer joy and bounce of the music and of the people playing it.

Official site of the film

Here is the Q&A with dir­ector Mark Landsman from after the screening, con­ducted by Hot Docs asso­ciate pro­grammer Dannielle Dyson:

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Duration: 12:13

8/10(8/10)

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