1704264142 Rock and TV 23 music documentaries for mythomaniacs on the

Rock and TV: 23 music documentaries for mythomaniacs on the platforms

There are worse vices: I spend part of my time searching television platforms for good biographical documentaries, concerts, programs or films about great rock figures. Especially from the golden years of the genre, the sixties and seventies, but not only; some are current productions, others were filmed around the time this happened; A good handful focus on parallel phenomena such as punk, soul, folk, reggae, ska or new waves of the eighties. These are the reviews I published in columns in El País Televisión last year. The films are available on Movistar+, YouTube, RTVE Play, Netflix, Prime Video, HBO Max, Filmin or Apple TV+. This is the selection:

Apollo

The best black music of the 20th century emerged from or passed through the legendary venue. The documentary “The Apollo Theater” on HBO Max examines what shared space means to a community’s identity

GLASTONBURY, ENGLAND – JUNE 24: Lizzo performs on the Pyramid Stage on Day 4 of the 2023 Glastonbury Festival on June 24, 2023 in Glastonbury, England.  (Photo by Harry Durrant/Getty Images)

The English festival, which Movistar Plus+ discusses in five chapters, prides itself on its versatility and generational diversity. The poster features old greats like Elton John and new divas like Lizzo. Everything fits here… Anglo-Saxon. Only one young big star opposes them

Guitarist Mick Taylor (left) and singer Mick Jagger performing with the Rolling Stones at Wembley Empire Pool, London, on September 7, 1973. Behind the drums is drummer Charlie Watts.  (Photo by Michael Putland/Getty Images)

The young guitarist was only in the band for five years, but they were the best. The film “Ladies & Gentlemen: The Rolling Stones” shows the fame he achieved in two concerts in 1972. But he didn't look like one of them.

Michelle Williams will play Janis Joplin.

The goddess of the “hippies” had listened to the pioneers of blues, jazz and soul and claimed their songs as her own. The documentary “Janis” clears up the cliché of the tortured girl who gave her all on stage

CBGB

The documentary “At the Matinée” recalls the day's events in and around the punk mecca of New York. In this space in the middle of a run-down neighborhood, the urban tribes made a lot of noise

Tina Turner with Mick Jagger, whom she taught to move his hips, at the Live Aid benefit concert in 1985.

The charity festival, which took place 38 years ago, was described by Joan Baez as the Woodstock of a different generation. Memorable for those who followed him, although something creaked

Syd Barrett, founding singer, songwriter and guitarist of Pink Floyd, in 1967. (Photo by Chris Walter/WireImage)

The documentary Syd Barrett and the Origin of Pink Floyd attempts to explain the mysteries of a key figure in psychedelic rock. He founded one of the biggest bands of his time and disappeared. The crazy diamond didn't want to shine

1982: Rock singer Freddie Mercury (Frederick Bulsara, 1946 – 1991) from the popular British group Queen has his mustache groomed.  (Photo by Steve Wood/Express/Getty Images)

The documentary “The Final Act” goes far beyond the career of the Queen leader and the tribute concert at Wembley Stadium: it deals with the double discrimination against homosexuals due to their illness and AIDS in very tragic years

English singer Sandie Shaw accepts a drink from disc jockey Jimmy Savile (1926-2011) at a Variety Club of Great Britain luncheon at the Savoy Hotel in London on September 14, 1965.  You were voted the best singer and best disc jockey by the readers of the music magazine “Melody Maker”.  (Photo by J. Wilds/Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

The 1965 film on Netflix travels back in time with a generation of pop-rock bands that made history. Irresistible, if it weren't for what we now know about its presenter Jimmy Savile.

(MANDATORY CREDIT Ebet Roberts/Getty Images) UNITED STATES – JANUARY 1: USA photo by SELECTER, posed group portrait (Photo by Ebet Roberts/Redferns)

Three documentaries by the German Wolfgang Büld captured the social and countercultural upheaval of the late 1970s. And they address the debate about miscegenation and racism

An image from the documentary “Crock of Gold: Drinking with Shane MacGowan.”

The documentary “Crock of Gold” portrays the leader of the Pogues without skimping on the crudeness. From his broken voice and toothless mouth flowed verses of intoxicating melancholy.

FILE PHOTO: Paul McCartney (l) and Ringo Starr perform during the taping of "The Night That Changed America: A GRAMMY Salute to the Beatles"which commemorates the 50th anniversary of The Beatles' appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show in Los Angeles on January 27, 2014.  REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni/File Photo

The Now and Then mini-documentary insists on the story of the demos, which John left before his death because he thought McCartney would finish them. Harrison is no longer there either, but they imitate him

GRAF9670.  CANNES, May 24, 2022. - Nobody can take away the label of a rock star from the British David Bowie, but reducing him to just that does not do him justice.  The documentation "Moon daydream", premiered in Cannes, uses unpublished images to portray a versatile artist who constantly challenged himself.  EFE/Organic Publicity – EDITORIAL USE ONLY/ONLY AVAILABLE FOR ACCOMPANYING NEWS (MANDATORY) –

Brett Morgen's documentary omits important passages from his career, but is an immersive and fascinating experience that delves into the mind of the creator beyond his masks

Robbie Robertson, the musician who wanted to make films

The group enjoyed less fame than recognition, but they left behind timeless albums and ensured that Scorsesse was immortalized in The Last Waltz and Once Were Brothers.

LAS VEGAS, NV – SEPTEMBER 21: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY, NO COMMERCIAL USE) Jack White performs onstage during the iHeartRadio Music Festival at T-Mobile Arena on September 21, 2018 in Las Vegas, Nevada.  (Photo by Rich Fury/Getty Images for iHeartMedia)

The documentary “Kneeling at the Anthem DC” includes two performances by the musician in Washington in 2018. He's one of the few hopes left for guitar rock, but he's an elusive guy

Groups as diverse and important as the Beatles, The Who, the Rolling Stones, The Kinks and Small Faces eventually colored their music with psychedelia.  Those responsible were Soft Machine, Procol Harum, Cream, Traffic and, above all, Pink Floyd.  Under the then leadership of Syd Barrett (second from left in the picture: singer, ideologist and main composer) in 1967 they embodied the spirit of lysergic, improvised and captivating “light shows” in songs like “Arnold Layne” and “See Emily Play”.  of the legendary UFO Club in London.  And they crystallized in the great treasure of British psychedelia: “The Piper at the Gates of Dawn”, a mixture of nursery rhymes, space excursions and sonorous Dadaism.  Unfortunately, Barrett was one of the victims of psychedelia and became stuck in his travels shortly after the album's release.  Months later he had already left the group, which took a completely different path under the leadership of Roger Waters.

The documentary “Pink Floyd: Technicolor Dream” reconstructs the legendary 1967 festival at which mad genius Syd Barrett's band stood out

Picture of the Beatles taken by Don McCullin in London on July 28, 1968.

The 1968 documentary “All My Loving” brings together pop stars and their critics to discuss whether the music movement of the time was truly culture or just the pastime of a generation addicted to intoxication.

The previous order was capricious; Below I group six pieces about Spanish music of the last decades, focusing on Movida and one of its relatives: radical rock, but not only.

Enrique Villarreal, “El Drogas”, at the door of the Hotel María Cristina in San Sebastián.

The documentary about the founder of Barricada refutes the clichés of the sober, homely and sensitive musician who has reconciled with his past

Litus and Novoa, with Rayden, Vanesa Martín and Dani Fernández, in the first chapter of “El Dressing Room”.

The group “Litus and Novoa” invites personalities such as José Mercé, Josele Santiago and Luz Casal to their studio to exchange confidences and improvise their own or other people's songs. They have a feeling of chaos, that everything is spontaneous

Julián Infante (guitar), Alejo Stivel (vocals), Manolo Iglesias (drums), Felipe Lipe (bass) and Ariel Rot (guitar): Tequila at the end of the seventies.

The documentary “Tequila: Sex, Drugs and Rock & Roll” is an honest account of how success overwhelms some young people in their transition years. What came next was a different reality

Nino Bravo GVA April 13, 2023

The program La 2 combines unreleased material and memories of the singer's environment. His death 50 years ago was a shock in a Spain that needed songs like “Libre.”

SAN SEBASTIAN, SPAIN – SEPTEMBER 17: Singer Evaristo Paramos of “La Polla Records” and his mother Pilar Perez attend the “No Somos Nada” photocall at Kursaal Palace during the 69th San Sebastian International Film Festival on September 17, 2021 in San Sebastian part.  Spain.  (Photo by Carlos Alvarez/Getty Images)

The leader of the punk band delivers his speech with few nuances, but in “We Are Nothing” we see an affable, modest guy who enjoys life in the country. Especially when he's standing next to Pilar

Miguel Ríos, in an appearance in the series “What a night that year”, from 1987.

In the series “What a night that year!” on RTVE Play, the Granada singer brought colleagues from three decades to his set. It has abused its prominence, but is a valuable document from the era when live music played the leading role on television

Do you want more? A little over a year ago, I did the same exercise, collecting columns about documentaries and musical films. I came up with 16 featured titles, but also added a detailed overview of everything else available on streaming. With stories about rock greats like Elvis Presley, the Beatles and Jimi Hendrix; the southern sounds of Johnny Cash or Lynyrd Skynyrd; blues and jazz stars such as Billie Hollday, Ma Rainey, Robert Johnson and Miles Davies; the fury of Rage Against the Machine… We'll keep going as long as we can and they allow us to explore television's most attractive gems for music lovers. No matter how hidden they are in the menus.

I'm not sure music makes the world a better place, but at least it helps us cope. Let's enjoy it.

rock

We select films and concerts about rock and roll, blues and jazz stars that are available to mythomaniacs and music lovers just a few clicks away. And a few more classics

You can follow EL PAÍS Television on X or sign up here to receive our weekly newsletter.

Get the TV newsletter

All the latest news from broadcasters and platforms, with interviews, news and analyses, as well as recommendations and reviews from our journalists

LOG IN

Subscribe to continue reading

Read without limits

_