The Road to Memphis explained

The Road to Memphis
Director:Richard Pearce
Producer:Robert Kenner
Starring:B. B. King
Bobby Rush
Rosco Gordon
Ike Turner
Cinematography:Richard Pearce
Editing:Charlton McMillan
Distributor:BBC
Runtime:119 min
Country:Germany / UK

The Road to Memphis is a documentary directed by Richard Pearce.[1] The film is part of The Blues, a seven part PBS series, with Martin Scorsese as the executive producer.[2]

Synopsis

The Road To Memphis follows the career of Blues musician B.B. King as he returns to his hometown where he got his start at WDIA radio station.[3] It features interviews and performances by B.B. King, Bobby Rush, Rosco Gordon and Ike Turner as they come together in Memphis for the W. C. Handy awards in 2002. The film also contains historical footage of Howlin' Wolf and Rufus Thomas.

Critical reception

Variety (September 6, 2003):

Road to Memphis" is about the blues in the here and now — historical footage is kept to a minimum — and it establishes the notion that this remains a hard life for anyone who chooses it...Pic's cornerstone is a reunion show of the four Memphis artists, and Pearce introduces them in a hierarchical scale: King is a passenger in his well-appointed bus; Rush is his own bus driver. Everyone seems to know Ike Turner, whose musical reputation keeps doors open; Gordon pleads for recognition.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: TELEVISION REVIEW; The Blues: A History, A Homage. Mitchell. Elvis. September 26, 2003. The New York Times.
  2. News: Blues All Around Me. Goldberg. Michael Alan. September 25, 2003. Miami New Times.
  3. Web site: The Road To Memphis. Gallo. Phil. September 6, 2003. Variety.