Daniel Garber talks with Leslie Ann Coles and Barrie Wentzell about Melody Makers: Should’ve Been There
Hi, this is Daniel Garber at the Movies for culturalmining.com and CIUT 89.5 FM.
Melody Makers was a UK weekly tabloid established in 1926 as a jazz paper for professional musicians. But by the 1960s it shifted its focus, eventually becoming known as “the Bible of rock’n’roll”. Bands were formed in the classified ads at the back, and in the front, a cover photo could
launch a music career. But who were the melody makers who made it all happen?
Melody Makers: Should’ve Been There is a new documentary about the legendary paper — it’s writers, photographers and editors, and the musicians they wrote about. Using new interviews and period footage, it traces its rise and fall in an oral history of the age. The film is illustrated by the black and white pics of Barrie Wentzell, their chief photographer from 1965-1975, chronicling the gods of rock and roll. The film was directed and produced by award-winning Leslie Ann Coles, who is the founder of Toronto’s Female Eye Film Festival.
I spoke to Barrie Wentzell and Leslie Ann Coles at CIUT 89.5 FM.
Melody Makers opens Friday, July 12th, at the Royal Cinema.
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