Playing for Change: Peace Through Music
(Playing for Change: Peace Through Music)
In English, Spanish, Tibetan, Zulu with English subtitles.
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[PEACE] | 2007 | 76 min | Feature Documentary
Directed by: Jonathan Walls and Mark Johnson
USAWorld Premiere
Interests: Documentary, Music, Social IssuesMoods: Celebratory, Cross-Cultural, Exotic, Inspirational, Joyful, Musical, Political, Rebellious
www.playingforchange.com
Cast & Credits
Producers: Joe Carnahan, Mark Johnson, Kevin Krupitzer, Joel Goulder, Jeremy Goulder, Raan Williams
Director of Photography: Kevin Krupitzer
Program Notes
"When you play on the street, you play to the world," says a street performer captured by directors Mark Johnson and Jonathan Walls in this inspiring tribute to the unifying power of music. It was in this spirit of openness to serendipity that the two roamed across four continents for a year, recording various musicians at work in order to combine their distant voices into one global song. The result is a grand choir that defies space and time: An elderly guitar player in Santa Monica croons "Stand By Me" to the accompaniment of a mean washboard player in New Orleans, a rocking sitar player in India, and a Cuban improvising with a stick and corrugated plastic tube in Barcelona. Johnson and Walls keep the beat with split-screen editing, Super 8 footage, and moving performances of traditional music-from the freedom fighters of South Africa playing the songs that helped topple apartheid to the Zuni of New Mexico performing ancient songs of religious devotion. Manu Chao, whose worldwide success could qualify him as the sound of globalization, makes an appearance as well. Along the way, the musicians interviewed again and again present the idea that music is a tool to promote peace. And in one now-resonant segment, an old-timer in post-Katrina New Orleans expounds on his unwillingness to ever leave his beloved musical hometown. This paean to humanity will have music lovers dancing in their seats.
--Nancy Schafer













November 30, 2009 11:25 AM
Sonny said:
Damn Good Film
I had the pleasure of seeing this film at TFF in 08. It was an extremely moving experience. My personal TFF film so far from all the years I have attended screenings. Very well edited!