At Sundance, documentaries resurrect lost eras of music

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This image shows a scene from the documentary "Meet Me in the Bathroom" by Will Lovelace and Dylan Southern, an official selection of the Midnight section at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival. (Rebecca Greenfield/Sundance Institute via AP)

NEW YORK ā€“ Can a music scene still develop the way grunge did in 1990's Seattle or hip-hop did in the Bronx in the 1970s? Or has the digital makeover of music made such geographical-based explosions obsolete?

It's a question that hovers over the Sundance Film Festival documentary ā€œMeet Me in the Bathroom,ā€ a vivid and shambolic time capsule of early 2000s New York when bands like the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, TV on the Radio, the Strokes, Interpol and LCD Soundsystem made the city ā€” and Brooklyn in particular ā€” one the last easily identifiable hotbeds of rock music.

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The film, which debuted Sunday at Sundance, is directed by Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace, and adapted from Lizzy Goodmanā€™s book, ā€œMeet Me in the Bathroom: Rebirth and Rock and Roll in New York City 2001-2011." Focusing mainly on the first handful of those years, the documentary is an ode to an already far-gone era when a wave of bands revitalized New York's music scene, capturing the gritty romance of the city. Brief interludes of news footage hint at a broader digital narrative forming largely outside the scene's bubble: Y2K fears, the onset of Napster, the introduction of the iPod.

ā€œOne of the things we kept asking is: Is it even possible for a scene to emerge in one place with such intensity?ā€ Southern, who with Lovelace made the 2012 LCD Soundsystem documentary ā€œShut Up and Play the Hits,ā€ said in a recent interview. ā€œNow the way we consume music is different, the way we listen or even make music is different. The Guardian newspaper, when they reviewed the book, they described it as a flashbulb moment before everything changed.ā€

ā€œEverything is so democratized and spread out,ā€ adds Lovelace. ā€œPeople donā€™t seem to buzz around music the way they once did.ā€

At Sundance, though, there is always buzz around music documentaries. At last year's virtual festival, Questlove's ā€œSummer of Soul (or... The Revolution Will Not Be Televised)," which documented the 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival, was arguably the festival's biggest breakout hit. This year's Sundance, which is also happening virtually and runs through Sunday, abounds in music documentaries. Among this year's crop is the first film of a three-part Netflix documentary on Ye (formerly Kanye West), ā€œjeen-yuhs," and the SinĆ©ad O'Connor doc ā€œNothing Compares.ā€

The films differ widely in subject and style but they each resurrect a musical past that feels very distant from our present.

In the first part of ā€œjeen-yuhs," which debuts next month on Netflix, a not-yet-famous Ye is struggling to score a record deal, selling beats and yearning for the kind of ubiquity that has followed for him, more or less nonstop, since his 2004 debut album, ā€œThe College Dropout." His hustle is all-consuming, as is his confidence. ā€œEven me doing this documentary, it's a little narcissistic or whatever,ā€ Ye says in a self-reflective moment that now seems prophetic.

But there are also tender scenes in the film, directed by Coodie and Chike, that speak to what propelled Ye in the first place ā€” like the touchingly sweet support of his late mother, Donda. She's the most encouraging of mothers, rapping along to her son's lyrics and telling him, ā€œYou play tracks the way Michael Jordan shoots free throws.ā€

Such a maternal relationship never existed for O'Connor, who speaks about the abuse she suffered from her mother in Kathryn Ferguson's ā€œNothing Compares." To many, O'Connor has been largely reduced to a caricature ā€” that fiery bald Irish singer who tore up an image of the pope on ā€œSaturday Night Live.ā€ But ā€œNothing Compares," by laying out O'Connor's life, which she discusses in off-camera interviews heard through the film, gives O'Connor's music and career the depth it deserves by tracing the pain that drove it. She was just 20, and pregnant, when her 1987 debut album came out.

And from the start, O'Connor was outspoken on a wide range of issues, from the Catholic Church she had be schooled under, to the Grammy Awards' ghettoizing of rap. Sometimes her protests came with self-aggrandizement, but you can't watch ā€œNothing Comparesā€ (which unfortunately, since the Prince estate didn't allow it, doesn't include ā€œNothing Compares 2 Uā€) and not think that O'Connor's rage came from a genuine place. And the intervening years, which have seen much uncovered about long-concealed abuse by Catholic priests, have cast her criticisms in a different light.

ā€œI was always being crazied by the media, made out to be crazy,ā€ she says in film. But the abuse of children by priests, she says: ā€œThat was crazy."

"Nothing Comparesā€ suggests O'Connor, in speaking out the way she did, was ahead of her time. Yet the documentary stays largely in the past, effectively ending in the mid-'90s and not following O'Connor's life since her brief mega-stardom. A Sundance standing ovation might have been a crowning moment of redemption for O'Connor. The film's festival Q&A was canceled after her 17-year-old son, Shane O'Connor, recently killed himself.

Rita Baghdadi's ā€œSirens" is set against a recent past and a more tumultuous political backdrop. It is, without a doubt, the most compelling portrait of a female Lebanese thrash metal band you've ever seen. But it's also a clear standout at Sundance and far more than a novelty act. In a documentary genre that can easily slide into clichĆ©, ā€œSirensā€ exists another world. Its characters, the members of the Beirut-based Slave to Sirens, are wrestling with more extreme issues than most black-clad, tattoo-covered bands confront. For them, freedom of speech battles and LGBTQ rights blur with power chords.

It's a classic tale of band dynamics, too, focusing largely on the friendship and disagreement of Lilas Mayassi and Shery Bechara, the band's two guitarists. Their squabbles sometimes sound like those of any band. But in other occasions, resistance on stage and off joins in harmony. In one scene, Mayassi and Bechara meet and converse on sidewalk, only to be engulfed by a marching protest, which they casually join.

Southern and Lovelace made ā€œMeet Me in the Bathroomā€ (the title comes from a Strokes song) mostly during the pandemic. Though they always intended to focus largely on archival footage, the circumstance led them to keep the film entirely in its period, without the modern-day reflections of talking heads. Instead, ā€œMeet Me in the Bathroomā€ captures the feeling of limitless potential ā€” of seemingly born-to-perform singers like Karen O and Julian Casablancas making their first steps onto a stage. The directors considered each thread a coming-of-age story.

ā€œIn a weird way, COVID helped us because in lockdown, people had time on their hands and they were happy to climb into the attic or go into their storage unit and find these things that had been there for 20 years,ā€ says Southern. ā€œWhat we didnā€™t want to do was make a typical behind-the-music rock-doc where you have talking head interviews with the bands 20 years later and it really takes you out of the time. We wanted as much as possible to situate the audience back in that time.ā€

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Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP


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