
August 1219, 1999
movie shorts
Recommended
For a quarter century, Robert Mugge has been documenting the history of indigenous music, from blues to gospel, salsa to zydeco. Hellhounds, his newest film, suffers a bit from its unusual (for Mugge) subject matter instead of biography or history, much of the film is taken up with the analytical matter of Johnsons influence, while you get the sense that Mugge is most comfortable just letting people tell their own stories. Produced by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the film is centered around a tribute concert and symposium mounted in the Fall of 1998, with the Rock Halls typically uneven lineup. Joe Louis Walker and Alvin Youngblood Hart pump new life into Johnsons compositions, while the ever-atrocious Bob Weir (of Grateful Dead fame) offers a lackluster run through that barely qualifies as blues. (G. Love and Special Sauce play over the closing credits.) The tantalizing glimpses of the symposiums panel discussion offer insightful comments from Memphis historian Robert Gordon (director of his own Robert Johnson film) and especially Peter Guralnick, who wrote memorably about Johnson in Feel Like Goin Home. A lengthy discussion of whether or not a piece of found footage might be of Johnson playing guitar is fascinating in its tedium, revealing the depth of Johnson scholars obsession, but many of the best moments in Hellhounds (not surprisingly) take place (not surprisingly) far from Cleveland. Whether its the back porch interview with a childhood friend of Johnsons or Tracy Nelson, Marcia Ball and Irma Thomas rendition of "Come On in My Kitchen" on a dusty Arkansas road, theyre moments that Johnsons legacy is truly alive, and his spirit continues to exert its otherworldly influence.