‘Up From The Streets: New Orleans: The City Of Music’ Doc Now Available Digitally
The acclaimed doc debuted at the 2019 New Orleans Film Festival and received an Award of Excellence at the IndieFest Film Festival.
Mercury Studios (encompassing Eagle Rock Entertainment) and Michael Murphy Productions’ celebrated New Orleans documentary Up From The Streets: New Orleans: The City of Music is out now. The film will be available exclusively on digital formats.
Up From The Streets: New Orleans: The City of Music debuted at the 2019 New Orleans Film Festival and received an Award of Excellence at the IndieFest Film Festival, also winning the Gold Award for best feature documentary at the Houston WorldFest Film Festival. The film’s digital release follows a successful US virtual cinema run, which helped raise over $10,000 for The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Foundation’s Jazz & Heritage Music Relief Fund.
This insightful documentary chronicles the musical, creative, cultural and social evolution of a unique city steeped in music. Produced and directed by Michael Murphy and hosted by Oscar-nominated and six-time Grammy-winning jazz trumpeter / composer Terence Blanchard – Up From The Streets dissects the evolution of the city’s music, from early innovations in Jazz through R&B and Funk.
What makes New Orleans a hotbed for musical talent? The answers can be discovered in the history of the city, its traditions, its diversity and its unique sense of integrated community. Archival and newly filmed performances legends including Louis Armstrong, Fats Domino, Allen Toussaint, Dr. John, The Neville Brothers, and, of course, The Preservation Hall Jazz Band are weaved between conversations with such impactful New Orleans musicians as Branford Marsalis, Wynton Marsalis, Harry Connick, Jr., Mannie Fresh, and Dr. Michael White, as well as commentary by Robert Plant, Keith Richards, Bonnie Raitt, and Sting.
New Orleans created and nurtured the sounds that influenced 20th century American music. Up From The Streets: New Orleans: The City of Music celebrates this cultural epicenter in one definitive film. According to American Songwriter magazine, “there have been plenty of quality documentaries on the music of New Orleans. This is arguably the best.” “Anyone interested in the culture and music of New Orleans will love this film,” states Terence Blanchard. “The resilience of the people of New Orleans reflects the story of America.”
Listen to music from Up From The Streets: New Orleans: The City Of Music here.
David Walmsley
December 12, 2020 at 11:20 pm
My name for this kind of music is Bel Canto Jazz. Bel canto literally means beautiful song, and comes from 19th century opera, some of which fits the description. The only opera I have heard that is beautiful all the way through is La Traviata. Bel Canto to a T. New Orleans jazz and its European rebirth, Trad jazz, fit the same mold. They all raise your spirits, just as Classical music did in the latter half of the 18th century, and Romantic in the 19th.
David Walmsley
December 12, 2020 at 11:31 pm
I endeavoured to listen to some New Orleans jazz, as offered down below, but Spotify recommends occasional ads, to which I am chronically allergic. Still, I have lots to choose from in tapes, LPs, EPs, Youtube and CDs.