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1971: The Year That Music Changed Everything

  • Série télévisée
  • 2021
  • TV-MA
  • 45min
NOTE IMDb
7,6/10
2 k
MA NOTE
1971: The Year That Music Changed Everything (2021)
1971: The Year That Music Changed Everything
Lire trailer2:14
1 Video
1 photo
History DocumentaryMusic DocumentaryDocumentaryHistoryMusic

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe musicians and soundtracks that shaped the culture and politics of 1971.The musicians and soundtracks that shaped the culture and politics of 1971.The musicians and soundtracks that shaped the culture and politics of 1971.

  • Casting principal
    • Elton John
    • Graham Nash
    • Bob Gruen
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,6/10
    2 k
    MA NOTE
    • Casting principal
      • Elton John
      • Graham Nash
      • Bob Gruen
    • 49avis d'utilisateurs
    • 9avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Victoire aux 1 BAFTA Award
      • 1 victoire et 7 nominations au total

    Épisodes8

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux notés1 saison2021

    Vidéos1

    1971: The Year That Music Changed Everything
    Trailer 2:14
    1971: The Year That Music Changed Everything

    Photos

    Rôles principaux57

    Modifier
    Elton John
    Elton John
    • Self
    • 2021
    Graham Nash
    Graham Nash
    • Self
    • 2021
    Bob Gruen
    Bob Gruen
    • Self
    • 2021
    Marshall Chess
    • Self
    • 2021
    Rose Stone
    Rose Stone
    • Self
    • 2021
    Anne Nightingale
    • Self
    • 2021
    Stephen Paley
    • Self
    • 2021
    Tony Defries
    • Self
    • 2021
    Robert Greenfield
    • Self
    • 2021
    Ringo Starr
    Ringo Starr
    • Self
    • 2021
    Dana Gillespie
    Dana Gillespie
    • Self
    • 2021
    Linda Ronstadt
    Linda Ronstadt
    • Self
    • 2021
    Chrissie Hynde
    Chrissie Hynde
    • Self - Lead Singer, The Pretenders
    • 2021
    Joni Mitchell
    Joni Mitchell
    • Self
    • 2021
    Berry Gordy
    Berry Gordy
    • Self
    • 2021
    Lou Adler
    Lou Adler
    • Self
    • 2021
    Bernie Taupin
    Bernie Taupin
    • Self
    • 2021
    Sheila Frazier
    Sheila Frazier
    • Self
    • 2021
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs49

    7,61.9K
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    Avis à la une

    6epdfilm-1

    Interesting but lacking direction

    I'm always interested in music documentaries, and there have been some good ones over the years. This was lacking. It didn't know what it wanted to be: a documentary about how culture influenced the music or how the music influenced the culture. And if it tried to make a case that the relationship was symbiotic, it fell short. Their was no real "through line." There were interesting sections or stories but in the end, it just felt forced.
    8mikeiskorn

    Great

    I disagree with some of the other reviews about this documentary I thought was really well done. A lot of people said there was too much context about the music and it made the documentary feel stuffy well I actually felt that the context was appropriately put together and flowed very well. I really enjoyed watching some of this footage that I've never seen before.
    5greg-beaulieu

    Some good here, but flawed

    I enjoyed much of what I saw in this series. The archival footage let me see things like Bowie's appearance at Glastonbury that I had never encountered before. I had seen footage of the Stones in the south of France in '71 but this offered some new clips and new background, which was interesting. The same holds true for the emergence of Elton John in the US that year.

    The biggest flaw for me is that this often seems to take on the binary sort of thinking that has afflicted our political discourse of late and applied that to 1971 issues. It seems you were either for Nixon or a supporter of the extreme left. Obviously that isn't the case, but that is how it seems to be presented here. The same holds true for the episode dealing with the Black Panthers, Angela Davis and the Weather Underground subversives. It does a poor job of laying out the whole spectrum of positions with the various subtleties and instead goes for the simple political bad/good in presenting the characters. It seems to not understand that you could be opposed to Nixon and his policies without being a communist or far-left supporter. The same holds true for the segments about the UK underground press, which seemed to devote a lot of time to a group that was mostly appealing to an extremist fringe and did not make much impact on the greater society in the UK.

    I was slightly baffled by the amount of time given to An American Family, the PBS series featuring Pat and Bill Loud and their children. While it was certainly a groundbreaking piece of work that helped illustrate the social changes in society at the time, I thought this series was about music, and so it struck me odd to find so much footage of it here. At least the producers do not sidestep the point that drug use was the cause of the downfall of many of the artists who had emerged around this time, showing that in all the years since, some things really never change in the music and entertainment business.

    With all that said, the series is still fairly entertaining to watch, and really is mostly suffering from a misleading title. While some music certainly did lead to societal change, the series does not focus on that exclusively and takes the viewer to other areas where they probably should not have gone.
    8ngram-19405

    Excellent.....but

    I really loved this series, but they left out so many ground breaking albums. 1971 was the year Led zeppelin released IV with Stairway to Heaven, Pink Floyd released Meddle, The Allman Brother live at the Fillmore East, Janis Joplin released Pearl, Yes released Fragile, Van Morrison released Tupelo Honey, Jethro Tull's Aqualung, and Rod Stewart's Every picture tells a story. There were dozens of other albums that came out that year but these are just a few that helped shape my life. I was ten years old and had just got my first record player. The first 3 albums I bought were Aqualung, Zeppelin IV and the Allman Brothers live at the Filmore East. It was a great year for music.
    9caramia2002

    One of Best Yet at Capturing That Time

    I was 18 in 1971 and the good music just kept coming. But it had been for many years already, yet there was a change in 1971, typified by The Osmonds and other bubblegum creeping in, as this docuseries well shows. But it was an amazing year, coming off several amazing years for music. As a teen, I was drinking it all in and it was just a stunning time to be alive (and also very tragic). I really hope these filmmakers will do other years or decades.

    It's always hard to quantify the 60s and 70s without musical bias, so this was a monumental task. Usually, it's talking heads, so one person's opinion, or the same celebs over and over. Or they only hit the Top 40 bands and give the "establishment" or record label view of the situation. But this series only uses interviews of artists, producers, DJs, journalists, politicians (but very few) and other snippets from that year over the appropriate footage, so a kind of audio cinema verite, if you will. There's no narrator. It reminds me of the style of films like Woodstock, which let the event (or time, in this case) speak for itself. The choice of artists and music was generally good (compared to what else is out there). It could have been better, but I'll take it. You can't cover everyone, even in 8 episodes. At least, like with their brilliant "Amy", they go beyond the tabloidy or even nightly news, into what we, as young people, were actually experiencing.

    I'm so happy they included Soul and funk music and the issues surrounding civil rights at that time and the awakening of Black consciousness. That's an important story, of course, but also really a story for everyone, as it also meshed into the other movements of the time and white kids and Black kids had many areas in which they crossed over. And they widely supported each other, which was very new for that time, as most white kids had never been around Black kids (busing was still blocked by the courts in my school in 1971). Vietnam and music were important bridges for that, as well as for the first time, white kids were treated somewhat like Black people had been for decades (well, centuries), with disdain, violence, discrimination, and police brutality. So a great empathy came out of that time for what Black people were going through, which has sadly been forgotten now by many who subscribed to it then.

    While a lot of the footage has been shown in other music and cultural docs, there's a lot of obscure or rarely seen clips, so new ground is definitely covered, which is a huge thing as that era has been done to death, at least culturally, but this series melds music, the counterculture, Vietnam, civil rights, drugs, and the overlap between them all better than any I have seen. The clips of Black musicians and leaders makes me sad for today, how we need them now instead of the fashion brand gangsta rap celebs more interested in bling and riches than much needed civil rights, their voice diluted by the same. In those years, you had people who were well read and educated in human rights and activism, now just pop stars with quick money. On all sides. The establishment definitely won.

    Living through that time and also being in the music business, I feel like I have a good take on music then, but I learned a few things. The clips of Bill Withers just being a singer/songwriter are revelatory. His big hit was mired in strings and popish, so he didn't stand out to me then, but definitely more there than I knew. I thought the great Staple Singers were singing "going to the races" instead of "lying to the races"! That was a brave thing to sing then, although I imagine many mis-heard it like I did.

    I think they missed a few really important bands, like Jethro Tull (Aqualung was released in 1971, following the brilliant Benefit), Emerson, Lake, and Palmer, Yes (although they showed Yes for 2.5seconds) both early synthesizer adopters of the new prog rock, although they mentioned the snobbery of that genre yet never uttered the words "prog", Derek and the Dominoes (Eric Clapton before he preached racism) Layla was released in late 1970 but the the unknown name meant there was a delay in people hearing/buying it, The Allman Brothers (Live at Fillmore East), The Eagles were debuting (they opened for Jethro Tull, and they were great, but they were heralding in the new, less socially conscious regime that was to take over), Led Zeppelin released Untitled (Led Zep IV) which was monumental, Hendrix died in fall 1970, but was still a huge force and had been the main artist who transformed rock into hard rock. Motown was still huge, Wilson Picket, and War. And many others. Spirit was a timely and important band and had just released their seminal album, Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus. Or that Graham Parsons greatly influenced the writing of The Stone's Exile on Main St, as he was Keith's buddy in the south of France.

    They stick a bit to the Rolling Stone party line of the time, which was everything Rolling Stones, Bowie, and a few others. That was frustrating then, as there was so much more (which their reviewers were constantly panning, unless their "pets", like Springsteen later). But the filmmakers don't get too mired in RS nor were they mainly influential here. Nor was any one label, as far as I can tell (but they are all one, now, it seems).

    The same pop pablum of The Osmonds (mentioned here as a sad harbinger of things to come) and The Jackson 5 was definitely happening with bubblegum pop and other mindless bands and artists (Monkees, Grassroots, Carpenters (but you can't deny Karen Carpenter), etc. The counterculture that crept into Top 40 pop earlier was pretty much gone by 1971. No more flowers, beads, or born to being wild.

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    Détails

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    • Date de sortie
      • 21 mai 2021 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • 1971:那一年,音樂改變了世界
    • Sociétés de production
      • Mercury Studios
      • On the Corner Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

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    • Durée
      45 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color

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