The other music from Detroit
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Dennis Piszkiewicz
While adolescents of all ages are lining up for tickets to see the
rapper from Detroit in “8 Mile,” there is a shorter line of folks at
a single theater in Orange County that is showing a movie about the
creators of much of America’s best pop music, “Standing in the
Shadows of Motown.” If you like your music with melody as well as
rhythm, see this film while you still have the chance.
This movie documents the careers and music of the Funk Brothers, a
group of a dozen or so jazz and rhythm and blues musicians who formed
the house band for the “Motown” record label during the 1960s and
early 1970s. This team of black and white musicians backed the hits
of Marvin Gaye, Diana Ross and the Supremes, Stevie Wonder, the Four
Tops and dozens of other acts; but as musicians, they were kept far
in the background.
Time has taken many of the Funk Brothers. Only eight were left
when shooting for this movie began. Drummer Richard Allen died last
June, and keyboard player Johnny Griffith died just last week while
promoting this film’s opening in Detroit. Most people have never
heard of the Funk Brothers, but their time has finally come.
Not only do the Funk Brothers demonstrate their musical chops in
this film, they also tell some great stories of their days making pop
music for scandalously low wages. One of Motown’s arrangers makes the
comment that the heart of Motown’s music was in the Funk Brother’s
performances. Anybody could have done the singing, and the recordings
would have been hits. It is an exaggeration, but there is an
underlying truth to it. The film backs this point with concert
performances of Motown favorites by the surviving Funk Brothers, with
vocals by talented cover artists. Allowing for small differences in
style from the originals, the singers’ performances are credible;
and, with the Funk Brothers driving the music, all of the tunes rock.
The Funk Brothers’ concert performances include the Motown hits
“What Becomes of the Broken Hearted,” “Reach Out (and I’ll Be
There),” “Heat Wave,” “Do You Love Me,” and a great version of Marvin
Gaye’s “What’s Going On.” “Dancing in the Streets,” my favorite
Motown hit, plays over the ending credits.
I can’t remember the last time I saw a move that made me tap my
foot and want to get up and dance. The only complaint worth
mentioning that I have about “Standing in the Shadows of Motown” is
that I left the theater wanting more.
* DENNIS PISZKIEWICZ is a Laguna Beach resident.
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