Showing posts with label Academy Award. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Academy Award. Show all posts

Thursday, January 24, 2013

An EXCLUSIVE interview with SEARCHING FOR SUGAR MAN's RODRIGUEZ and director MALIK BENDJELLOUL!




An EXCLUSIVE interview with 
director MALIK BENDJELLOUL 
and star RODRIGUEZ

By Stephen SPAZ Schnee

     Searching For Sugar Man is a documentary like no other.  There are so many exceptional elements to the film, all of which add up to a wonderfully moving experience for the viewer.  Not only does it tell a story of a long-forgotten musician who finally gains the recognition he has always deserved, it is also filled with hope, joy and a passionate love and respect for the man at the center of the film, singer/songwriter Sixto Rodriguez (who goes by the professional name Rodriguez). 
          Rodriguez was discovered in the late ‘60s while playing a gig in Detroit. A 1967 single appeared on the Impact label, but it would take another three years for an album to appear. Cold Fact was an album that mixed social awareness, politics, Folk Music and Psychedelia, sounding not unlike a mixture of Donovan and Dylan during their heyday. Unfortunately, the album didn’t fare well in the states commercially. He went back into the studio and recorded his second album, which met the same fate as his debut. After the failure of both albums, Rodriguez’s musical career seemed to be over. Or was it…
     Cold Fact was released in South Africa in 1971 and was a huge hit. The album ended up going platinum. In Australia, the album met with even bigger success, selling 5X platinum! Oddly enough, Rodriguez was completely unaware of his enormous popularity in those countries. It wasn’t until decades later that he realized that his music had a profound effect on so many people in these countries.
     But in South Africa, even though Rodriguez was one of the most popular cult artists around, his fans knew nothing about him. Rumors began circulating that he had committed suicide on stage during one of his performances. From a self-inflicted gunshot wound to lighting himself on fire, the rumors grew more elaborate as time moved on. They myth and the mystery that surrounded Rodriguez fueled his popularity even more.
     In the ‘90s, a South African fan, Stephen ‘Sugar’ Segerman, began a search for any information on Rodriguez. Journalist Craig Bartholomew-Strydom became involved, as did Alec McCrindle, who helped Segerman set up a website in 1997. Once they discovered that Rodriguez was, in fact, still living and breathing in Detroit, it ended up changing the lives of everyone involved.
     A handful of years later, budding Swedish filmmaker Malik Bendjelloul became intrigued by the story and decided to document the search for the enigmatic singer/songwriter.  Nearly five years later, Malik’s vision and hard work have paid off with numerous awards, critical accolades and, best of all, an Academy Award nomination, which will most certainly lead to the big win.
     During the very week the Academy Award nominations were announced, Stephen SPAZ Schnee was able to chat with Malik and Rodriguez and discuss their marvelous journey so far….


SPAZ: Searching For Sugar Man has been one of the best reviewed films in recent years.  Now, it is available on DVD/Blu-Ray and, best of all, has been nominated for an Academy Award.  How are you feeling about the reaction to the project and all that has led up to it?
MALIK BENDJELLOUL:  It’s wonderful!  I’m so happy!
RODRIGUEZ:  I did my own stunts in the film. (Laughs). I’m in the film eight minutes. It’s really Malik’s project. The film has reignited my music career but it’s really his masterpiece.  He’s worked so hard on it for over four years.  It was picked up at Sundance and he’s had a full year of promotion.  He’s gone to Moscow with it, the Czech Republic... he’s gone to Australia with it.  He’s worked real hard.

SPAZ: In all honesty, have you been surprised by the extremely positive reaction that the film has generated?
MALIK: Yes, I really, really was. To be honest, I didn’t know if it was going to work. It’s my first film: I didn’t know what to expect at all. I had a feeling that the story was exceptional. That’s why I spent four years of my life doing this. 

SPAZ:  Do you remember what Rodriguez’s reaction was when you first approached him about making the movie?
MALIK: He doesn’t like the camera and you couldn’t get him in front of a camera.  They (the fans) said I shouldn’t even try to get him in front of a camera because he should remain a mystery.  But we wanted him.  We didn’t want him to be exploited. I think that maybe (they thought) the way I was going to portray him… that it was going to ruin it.  He is very much a private man with a lot of integrity.  
RODRIGUEZ: I was reluctant.  I was kind of resisting the film.  I put it off as much as I could.  He (Malik) convinced that we should do it.  He’d already done so much work on it. It really is a triumph.  I’m enjoying it.  It’s reached a lot more people than you can imagine.


SPAZ: Malik, the film is a brilliant and creative mix of film and animation.  What made you choose that route instead of a montage or re-enactments?
MALIK:  I really don’t like re-enactments.  I thought animation would be better because it’s very obvious that you aren’t trying to fake something.  If you re-enact, you don’t know if it’s real or not real. The original idea was to use much more animation than what’s in the movie, but because of the lack of funding, there are only a few examples.

SPAZ: The film unfolds in a very intimate and emotional way, much like Rodriguez’s music.  Did you find it difficult to convey that feeling when putting the film together?
MALIK:  It’s very much an emotional journey and that’s really the reason why I wanted to make the film.  It has that very moving element that is universal: even kids will get it, your grandmother will get it, everyone will get it.  It’s not a typical story.  It’s a guy who spends his whole life as a construction worker without knowing, at the very same time, he’s a superstar.  There are fans looking for their ‘dead’ idol. Then they find out that’s he’s not dead: he’s alive… and it changes his life.  It’s so emotional and that is what made me so interested in spending so much time on this

SPAZ: Rodriguez, is it kind of surreal for you to be the subject of this critically adored film?
RODRIGUEZ: The climax of the film takes place in ’98. We’ve been touring since then and I’ve had a lot of experiences since that time. But this film thing… it’s a different medium. It’s the meeting of film and music. The film is distributed by Sony Pictures Classics and they are really behind it. We got picked up, which is another thing: Malik didn’t know that was going to happen, which is quite something for him. And since I’m the subject of it (laughs), I’m a lucky guy. I’m really fortunate that it’s happened at this pace. I really appreciate it.

SPAZ: The incidents in the film span many years, leading up to your triumphant concerts in South Africa in 1998.  Apart from the recent resurgence in the popularity of your music and the film, has your life changed much in the last 13 years since those concerts?
RODRIGUEZ: Yeah, I’ve been out four times to South Africa, four times to Australia, six times to England… Sweden… all these places.  It’s a complete transformation.  It’s a pretty amazing time.

SPAZ: Malik, there are so many visually beautiful shots of Capetown and Detroit.  Did you get lucky when you filmed in each city, or did you have to wait around to capture what you were looking for?
MALIK:  Everything was so perfect, the way that it worked. Detroit and Capetown couldn’t have been two more different places. In the movie, we show Detroit during the winter when it’s cold and snowing and then we have Capetown, where it’s summer and sunny… the exact opposite.

SPAZ:  At what point during the pre and/or post-production did you realize that you had one hell of a film on your hands?
MALIK: I wouldn’t have spent four years of my life getting this film made if I didn’t believe in it, but I still had people telling me that I was wrong.  The main funder, for example, said when it was almost finished, that it wasn’t good enough for feature length…. Said I needed to re-edit it.  It was only good enough for TV! (Laughs). I thought I had something special. There were a few people in the industry who actually said they didn’t like it, that it was crap. I thought, “Come on, you’re wrong.  And I’m going to prove that you’re wrong!”  

SPAZ: A film about a virtually unknown artist is a hard sell.  Was it difficult to find people to help back the film?
MALIK: Yes, it was hard thing to convince people. He was absolutely unknown in America.  Only the die hard music fans knew about him. 

SPAZ: Rodriguez, “Sugar Man” is your most well-known song and it inspired the title of the film. Can you tell us a little about the song’s origins?
RODRIGUEZ: “Sugar Man” is almost like a prayer, you know? That’s all that that is. It’s a tune with words. I describe ‘Sugar Man” as a descriptive song, not a prescriptive song.
 

SPAZ: Malik, maybe even more so than Light In The Attic’s great reissues of his albums, you’ve brought Rodriguez the attention and acclaim he’s always deserved.  Was that part of your intention in making the film?
MALIK:  I only wanted to tell a good story, but I’m honored to be a part of this thing. The film, you’ll see once or twice, but the music, if you like it, it stays with you.  You’ll listen to those songs for the rest of your life if you really fall in love with them. It’s going to stay with people much longer than the film does. In some ways, I think this would have happened anyway because the music is that good.

SPAZ: Rodriguez, since the resurgence in your music and this film, has your life changed much?  And does it feel good to finally be acknowledged for the music you created?
RODRIGUEZ: We do music for the girls.  We do music for the money.  We do music for the recognition.  We do it for Rock ‘n’ Roll history.  But we do music because it’s fun, because it’s a pleasure.  It’s not a spectator sport: you can dance to it; you can sing to it, you can get an instrument and play along with it. That’s the part of it that is appealing to me.

SPAZ: Malik, was music a big part of your upbringing and life? 
MALIK:  Yes, very much so.  When you are a teenager, it is really the thing that gives you your life, your identity to a large degree.

SPAZ: Were you drawn to Rodriguez’s story because of the music?  Or do you think that you would have made this film if it was the same story but he was an artist or film maker?
MALIK:  I really think that the story is good enough.  The story tells itself.  But the music makes it better.  There is so much emotional content in the music that you can’t put it into words. Music is magic.  No one can explain why you play certain chords in a certain order and it gives you a good feeling, but it does.  It’s just magic.  Music was so important to tell this story.

SPAZ: Rodriguez, there is more of an interest in your music than ever before.  Has this inspired you to go back and create something new for your growing audience?
RODRIGUEZ: Yes.  I plan to be in the studio this year sometime.  It’s got to be good. And that is why it takes so long.  I’m working the catalog right now.  That’s what they hear and unless I go out and play it, they won’t think I’m on the same page.

SPAZ: What’s next for Rodriguez?
RODRIGUEZ: I’ve got to get my guitar fixed. The frets have been worn down. I’ve got to get them replaced because it’s a cheap guitar.  Some people have really expensive guitars… so expensive that they wish they could drive them!  (Laughs)

Thanks to Malik Bendjelloul and Rodriguez
Special thanks to Caitlin McGee, Lauren Watt and Jocelynn Pryor

SEARCHING FOR SUGAR MAN  
is 
Available NOW!

Thursday, August 4, 2011

An EXCLUSIVE interview with JEFF BRIDGES!




By Stephen SPAZ Schnee



     After an affectionate intro by producer and music icon Quincy Jones, rapturous applause greets a humble yet confident Jeff Bridges as he takes to the stage of the legendary Troubadour club in West Hollywood. Flanked by his band, The Abiders, Bridges is here to promote his eponymous Blue Note Records debut, his first album in more than a decade. The club is filled with friends (Ryan Reynolds, T-Bone Burnett, Pierce Brosnan), family (including his wife Susan and his brother Beau) and invited music industry guests, many of whom are unfamiliar with Jeff’s musical history which stretches all the way back to the late ‘60s.
     From the moment the band kicks into set opener “Hold On You,” the world outside the club ceases to exist: Bridges has the audience in the palm of his hand and he does not disappoint during this hour-plus set. Having not graced the Troubadour stage in 40 years, Bridges is remarkably calm and collected, clearly enjoying the overwhelming response to his music. While it’s easy to categorize his style as Country, to be honest, he’s more Tom Waits than Tom T. Hall. The raw honesty and emotional depth that runs through the songs are more akin to Folk and Americana than anything you’d find on a Now That’s What I Call Country compilation.
     Performing seven of the new album’s cuts, Bridges manages to throw in a few favorites from the soundtrack to Crazy Heart, the 2009 film that won him an Academy Award for Best Actor. Apart from winning him the coveted Oscar, Crazy Heart is also significant because it introduced the musical side of Bridges to a wider audience.
     Truth be told, music is not a vanity project for Bridges like it has been for so many other actors (Cory Feldman, come on down!). In fact, music is Jeff’s first love and that fact is plainly obvious from the moment he steps up to the microphone. As Quincy had explained during his introduction, while Jeff and his brother were working with the producer in 1969, Hollywood came calling. Jeff went off to film The Last Picture Show, fully intending to resume his music career once he’d finished his acting commitments. That role earned him his first Academy Award nomination and he never looked back.
     Over the next 40 years, Bridges made his mark as one of Hollywood’s finest and most respected actors. He’s played many memorable roles over the years, but the one role that struck a chord with movie fans was his portrayal of The Dude in the Coen Brothers’ classic 1998 film The Big Lebowski. No matter how high his career flies or how many awards he wins, The Dude is the one role that has connected with so many people around the world. So much so that in the middle of tonight’s set, a fan offers Bridges a White Russian (The Dude’s drink of choice), which he politely refuses with a grin.
     At the end of the set, Bridges performs “The Weary Kind,” the theme to Crazy Heart which was performed by Ryan Bingham on the film’s soundtrack. Bridges’ version is even more emotional than the original and it leaves the audience spellbound. The final song of the evening is a cover of ‘The Man In Me”, the Johnny Cash tune that appears in The Big Lebowski.
     By the time he leaves the stage, everyone has all but forgotten Jeff Bridges, the Oscar-winning actor: they have just met and lovingly embraced Jeff Bridges, singer, songwriter and musician. And it seems that The Dude himself is pretty damn pleased about that.
     A week before the Troubadour show, I was able to sit down and have a chat with Jeff about the album and his musical career up to this point. We were joined by fellow scribe Dave Rayburn, who snuck in a question as well.


SPAZ: Your self-titled album is just about to drop. How are you feeling about the project and your musical career up to this point?
JEFF BRIDGES: I’m over the moon. It’s so wonderful working with my old friends… (producer) T-Bone Burnett and my oldest friend, John Goodwin. That was great. The band that T-Bone put together was just phenomenal. Playing with these guys is just like making a movie: the casting of it is 99% of what makes it either fly or not. And T-Bone cast this so well.

SPAZ: The album is steeped in classic Country, but there are so many elements and layers to each of the songs that they transcend that genre. Did you purposely set out to incorporate so many influences on this project?
JEFF: I didn’t set out to put as many influences as possible, but I am influenced by a lot of different kind of music. One of the things that T-Bone kind of specializes in this sort of… I don’t know what you’d call it… an ‘Alternative Music Universe” or something. It’s sort of genre-less in a way. You feel like there are elements that it relates to, but it’s not in one particular genre: it kind of reinvents it, you know.

SPAZ: The album’s opener, “What A Little Love Can Do”, is like Cosmic Country, pulling in bits and pieces of Country’s past, present and future…
JEFF: That’s true, yeah. It’s also got a little Buddy Holly influence in there, too.

SPAZ: While the tracks are written by a variety of writers, including yourself, was it difficult to keep it as cohesive as it is?
JEFF: Not really. We ended up cutting 17 tunes in 12 days…you know, the rhythm tracks. There’s a wonderful thing that happens when you’re making a movie… I guess any kind of art… For awhile, you’ve got to bring stuff to it to nurture it. Then, after awhile, if things are going well, it starts to tell you what it wants and it starts to direct itself. That’s kind of what happened on this album. There are a lot of good songs that we did, but this was the best combination of songs for this album. We’ve got seven other tunes that I think are just as good that are not on there. It’s just a matter of gathering the material. We started out with about 70 songs and we got it down to just these.

SPAZ: Do you already foresee a Jeff Bridges 2 in the near future?
JEFF: I hope so, yeah! The music is there, we’ve got these great players and T-Bone, if he’s up for it again, it would be wonderful if it all falls into place. I guess it’s kind of like what they say about getting pregnant. When a woman has a child, she’s all “let’s do it again!” (laughs). You gotta really watch it if you don’t wanna get pregnant, not to go fooling around… and I fool around with music all the time! So, who knows?

SPAZ: Coming from a music lover’s background, when putting the tracklist together, did you envision this project as a record with two distinct sides?
JEFF: When we were making the music, we didn’t think of it in those terms, no. When they knew that they were going to make a vinyl of it, then we had to have ‘two sides’.

SPAZ: You’ve been friends with T-Bone Burnett for over 30 years. Does he instinctively know what sound you were trying to achieve and was he usually successful in translating what was in your head and putting it down on tape?
JEFF: When we went through all these songs to try to figure out what songs we were gonna do, he was really looking for something unique, something that was uniquely me, and I really appreciated that. That’s what he was bringing out with the musicians that he brought together. I specifically asked for those guys, too, because I’m a giant fan of every one of them.

DAVID RAYBURN: With names like T-Bone Burnett, Ryan Bingham, John Goodwin, Gary Nicholson, and late Stephen Bruton appearing as some of the common denominators on consecutive music projects, can you tell us something about the history of some of these friendships?
JEFF: A: Yeah, well, you know, John Goodwin and I, we go back to the 4th grade together. He’s one of my oldest friends and we’ve been writing music for, maybe not that long, but certainly maybe 30 or 40 years. We’d paint and do all sorts of creative things together. He’s a Nashville writer. Very prolific. So, we’ve been writing together and supporting each other’s music for a long time. With T-Bone and Stephen Bruton, we met on Heaven’s Gate 30 years ago. Kris Kristofferson, who starred in that movie, brought a bunch of his musician friends on board to play small roles. We had T-Bone and Stephen, Norton Buffalo, Ronnie Hawkins, a whole slew of just great players, wonderful musicians. And so, Crazy Heart kind of came out of that relationship with Stephen and T-Bone and I had back in those days. And this album was just kind of a natural growth out of Crazy Heart.

SPAZ: While some actors have dabbled in music, it’s been a major part of your life. While many have known of your musical talents, do you think Crazy Heart has made it easier for the public to realize that music isn’t just some part-time vanity project for you?
JEFF: A: Yeah, I think so. I hope so. I mean, that’s one of the reasons that it seemed like the right time to make some music and put out an album because it was in that same atmosphere that Crazy Heart came out of, and was seen by a lot of people. A lot of people seemed to enjoy that. So, yeah… I’m hoping that will help people enjoy it.

SPAZ: Now, what would you say is the difference between selecting the songs for Crazy Heart and this record? Weren’t there a couple songs that were leftover from Crazy Heart?
JEFF: Yeah, well you know John Goodwin supplied a song for Crazy Heart… that “Hold On You” song, the opening one is one of his tunes. And a couple of the Bruton tunes were being thought of for Crazy Heart as well. That song “Nothing Yet” was thought of, but you can only have so many songs in the movie, you know. All the songs that we liked that we had in the movie we really liked. Not that the other songs… we didn’t like… it’s just that there’s only so many places, you know?

SPAZ: You’ve already shown your worth in acting, art and music. Any desire to take that next step to Broadway?
JEFF: (Pauses) I wouldn’t totally poo-poo the idea, but it’s not something I’m actively pursuing in any way!

SPAZ: What’s next for Jeff Bridges?
JEFF: I’m going to be playing a lot of music up ‘till September. We’re going to be playing Sturgis, that big motorcycle rally. We’re going to be doing Austin City Limits. I’ll be doing a bunch of shows here in California. Then, in September, I’ll be putting my acting hat back on and I’ll be doing a movie with Ryan Reynolds called R.I.P.D. I’m pretty much booked solid doing music until then. I’m also the national spokesperson for a campaign called No Kid Hungry (http://www.nokidhungry.org/) and I’m working on that as well.

SPAZ: What do you currently have spinning on your CD player?
JEFF: I’m listening to my buddies. I like Benji Hughes a lot. I don’t know if you are familiar with any of his tunes, but he’s got a wonderful album called A Love Extreme. I’m loving a lot of Marc Ribot music. He’s got a great album called Don’t Blame Me. I love that. He’s got a wonderful Cuban album that I love. And also love Johnny Goodwin’s stuff. I’ve got so many people that I’m close to that are wonderful musicians and that’s what I’m listening to, mainly.

SPAZ: What would The Dude think of this album?
THE DUDE: Oh, he would like it, man! He’d listen to it… he’d put it on his player right between the whales and Creedence, man!

Thanks to Jeff Bridges

Special thanks to Jacki Feldstein, Saul Shapiro, Dave Rayburn and Kimberly McCoy.




JEFF BRIDGES


JEFF BRIDGES


8.16.11