Standing in the Shadows of Motown
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Paul Justman
Joe Wheeler
Harvey Price
Ron Kerber
Earl Wenk
Steve Beskrone
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
In 1959, Berry Gordy gathered the best musicians from Detroit's thriving jazz and blues scene to begin cutting songs for his new record company. Over a fourteen year period they were the heartbeat on hits such as, "My Girl," "Bernadette," "I Was Made to Love Her," and every other hit from Motown's Detroit era. By the end of their phenomenal run, this unheralded group of musicians had played on more number one hits than the Beach Boys, the Rolling Stones, Elvis and the Beatles combined--which makes them the greatest hit machine in the history of popular music. They called themselves "The Funk Brothers". Forty-one years after they played their first note on a Motown record, and three decades since they last jammed together, the Funk Brothers reunited back in Detroit to play their music and tell their unforgettable story. The Funk Brothers' story is told through archival footage and still photos, narration, interviews, re-creation scenes, twenty Motown master tracks, and twelve new live performances of Motown classics. The Funk Brothers are also shown backing up such music stars as Chaka Kahn, Ben Harper, Bootsy Collins, Montel Jordan, Meshell Ndegeocello, Joan Osborne, and Gerald Levert.
Director
Paul Justman
Cast
Joe Wheeler
Harvey Price
Ron Kerber
Earl Wenk
Steve Beskrone
James Herron
Johnny Griffith
Kathryn Roy
David Giles
Lynch Travis
William Stockdale
Andrea Horvath
Bill Zaccagni
Kelly Mccormick
Ernie Rogers
Bob Babbitt
Jennifer Meier
Florence Rosenweig
Igor Szwec
Keith Benson
Tom Scott
Evan Solot
Tom Scott
Gerald Levert
Kasuku Mafia
Benjamin Keysaer
Joan Osborne
Luigi Mazzocchi
Davis Barnett
Allan Slutsky
Uriel Jones
Brian Marable
Angela Falco
Alex Alexander
Delbert Nelson
Joe Nero
Peter Dale
Treaty Womack
Virginia Cunningham
Joe Messina
Misty Love
Orest Artymiw
Cherokee Pree
Rudy Robinson
Kizzy Jester
Donald Becks
Marcus Belgrave
Aubree Gaston
Sandy Passman
Phil Chen
Tom Ventimiglio
Katie Chonacas
Larry Abramovitz
Dawn Blandford
Michael Pedicin
Jack Ashford
Seth Justman
Antonie Mckay
Edward Gooch
Tyler Blakely
Deseray Teague
Leo Brown
Patti Willis
Carl Mottola
Maciek Dolata
Ron Jennings
Ted Greenberg
Carla Benson
Craig Weiland
Dee Pappas
Andrt Braugher
Eddie Willis
Mark Mutafian
Rashid Mausi
Laytonya Jordan
Joe Hunter
Richard Allen
Antonio Ramirez
Ron Kischuk
Ben Harper
Anthony Pirollo
Michael Ellison
Chaka Khan
Ezar Thomas
Pili Jamal
Otis Lockhart
Lamont Witcher
Dayna Hartwick
Maurice Davis
Paul Burt
Bootsy Collins
Richard Hotchkiss
Gary Bosek
Joe Buono
Pradeep Suri
Johnny Ingram
Me'shell Ndegeocello
Montell Jordan
Madeline Cabano
Teedra Cryer
Kevin Smith
Crew
Richard Adler
Tony Adler
Annie Ahearn
Nickolas Ashford
Hank Ballard
Hank Ballard
Darren Barnett
Keith Benson
Keith Benson
Renaldo Benson
Rolfe Bergsman
Carol Branston
Carol Branston
Scott Brewster
Amy Carroll
Phil Chen
Christine Claussen
Alfred Cleveland
Dennis Coffey
Dennis Coffey
Bootsy Collins
Bootsy Collins
Cameron Cox
Leonore Crystal
Walter Dallas
Walter Dallas
Jonathan Dana
James Dean
John Demonaco
Autry Dewalt
Lamont Dozier
Darry Dusbiber
Paul Elliot
Anne B Erikson
Julie Fischer
Brian Fortenberry
Marvin Gaye
Marvin Gaye
Dale Gill
Janice Ginsberg
Larry Goodwin
Berry Gordy
George Gordy
Bryan Greenberg
Ted Greenberg
Ted Greenberg
Ted Greenberg
Ted Greenberg
Ted Greenberg
Ted Greenberg
Marlus C Harding
Ben Harper
Ben Harper
C Reed Hart
Wally Hayman
Brian Holland
Edward Holland
Ivy Joe Hunter
Scarlett Jade
James Jamerson
Jerry Jordan
Montell Jordan
Montell Jordan
Steve Jordan
Paul Justman
Seth Justman
Chaka Khan
Chaka Khan
Barb Lehto
Gene Leone
Gerald Levert
Gerald Levert
Gerald Levert
Joe Likins
Doug Madick
Dave Marsh
Martha And The Vandellas
Chuck Martin
Michael Q Martin
Michael Q Martin
Titania Martinez
Peggy Mcaffee
Andrew Midgley
Douglas Milsome
Douglas Milsome
Warren Moore
Me'shell Ndegeocello
Me'shell Ndegeocello
Timothy O'dea
Joan Osborne
Joan Osborne
Clive Palladino
Pino Palladino
Sandy Passman
Tom Pellerito
Mary Petryshyn
Mary Petryshyn
Andy Potvin
Catherine Quinn
Joy Rencher
Paul Riser
Paul Riser
William Robinson Jr.
Robert Rogers
Ritchie Rome
Mick Rossi
Dennis Rottell
Bob Sackter
Jamie Scarpuzza
David Scott
Tom Scott
Tom Scott
Ntozake Shange
Marty Shea
Valerie Simpson
Alexia Sims
Allan Slutsky
Allan Slutsky
Allan Slutsky
Allan Slutsky
Allan Slutsky
Allan Slutsky
Julie Smith
Evan Solot
William Stevenson
Donald Storball
Mark Strachan
William Strachan
Lon Stratton
Lon Stratton
Barrett Strong
The Supremes
Marvin Tarplin
Michael Tarsia
Clive Taylor
Clive Taylor
The Marvelettes
The Miracles
Catherine M Thomas
Catherine M Thomas
Ginny Turner
Joseph Valente
Earl T Van Dyke
Bernadine Vida
William Weatherspoon
Craig Weiland
Harry Weinger
Robert White
Ronald White
Norman Whitfield
Sean Wiedeman
Eric C Williams
Jim Williams
Keri Winthers
Jennifer Worrell
Perry Young
Larry Zabel
Dawn Zoltek
Chris Zurzolo
Chris Zurzolo
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Standing In the Shadows of Motown - Standing in the Shadows of Love
A former boxer and Korean War veteran, Gordy had tried his hand at running a record store but the failure of that enterprise threatened to consign him to the local Lincoln-Mercury plant until a chance meeting with Jackie Wilson set the course of his professional career. As a record producer, Gordy discovered The Miracles (then called the Matadors) and in 1959 founded his first record label, Tamla Records. A year later, he launched a second label, Motown, and later folded the pair into the Motown Record Corporation.
Operating out of the 3-track recording studio installed in the dirt floor garage of a former photographic studio on West Grand Boulevard (later dubbed Hitsville, USA), Gordy began drafting a house band for his growing roster of recording artists. Early hires included Birmingham, Alabama-born jazz drummer Benny Benjamin, pianist Joe Hunter from Tennessee, guitarist Eddie Willis from Grenada, Mississippi and bass player James Jamerson, who had migrated to Detroit at the age of 18 from Edisto Island, off the coast of South Carolina. Memphis-born Richard "Pistol" Allen had come north to learn engineering until the siren call of jazz made a drummer out of him. Uriel Jones had been a horn player until a side interest in boxing ruined his lip and necessitated a switch to the drums. The Funk Brothers, as the house band came to be called, comprised a baker's dozen musicians (including white players Joe Messina from The Soupy Sales Show band and Bob Babbitt, a one-time semi-professional wrestler), some of whom had to adjust to the arduous demands of session recording in "the Snake Pit." (Vibes player Jack Ashford was asked for one tune to pick up a tambourine, which became his signature instrument most notably on the Supremes' "You Can't Hurry Love" and Edwin Starr's "War.") Working twelve and fourteen hour days, seven days a week (their evenings occupied by club dates), the Funk Brothers had little time to reflect on the quality of their assignments. The musicians plugged through The Contours' "Do You Love Me" thinking the novelty song didn't have a chance, only to see the single become a Billboard Top 10 hit. Of the immortal introductory guitar lick of the Temptations' "My Girl," guitarist Robert White confessed "When I originally played it... I didn't think much about it. Only that it worked."
Standing in the Shadows of Motown is based on a book of the same name, published in 1987 by the Hal Leonard Corporation and recipient of the 1989 Ralph J. Gleason Music Book Award. Written by Grammy-winning session musician Allan Slutsky, the book was part guitar tutorial (complete with accompanying CDs) and part biography of Funk Brother James Jamerson, who only began to receive recognition as the soul of the Motown sound after his untimely death in 1983.
It took Slutsky eleven years to raise $3 million in financing for a feature-length documentary. Along the way, he retained music video director Justman (an editor on the concert films Cocksucker Blues [1972] and Chuck Berry: Hail, Hail Rock and Roll [1987]) and bided his time while the number of surviving Funk Brothers dropped from ten to eight. (Drummer Eddie Brown passed away in 1984, followed by second band leader Earl Van Dyke in 1992 and guitarist Robert White in 1994.)
Narrated by actor Andre Braugher (from a script by playwrights Ntozake Shange and Walter Dallas), Standing in the Shadows of Motown reunited the survivors for a reunion concert in Detroit and combines historical reenactments with on-camera testimonials, and archival and contemporary concert footage, as well as spirited jam sessions recorded in the Snake Pit a full generation after Motown quit Hitsville, USA in favor of downtown Detroit offices and a subsequent shift west to Los Angeles. Shooting Standing in the Shadows of Motown coincided with one of the worst winters in Detroit history, requiring the Funk Brothers, the film crew and their guests to bundle up indoors. They also had to deal with a burst pipe that flooded the stage of one of the reunion venues.
Standing in the Shadows of Motown was released by Artisan Entertainment, whose Buena Vista Social Club (1999) had also received an Oscar® nomination for "Best Documentary Feature." Defeated for that honor by Michael Moore's Bowling for Columbine (2002), Standing in the Shadows of Motown did receive a Grammy award for "Best Compilation Soundtrack Album" and was lauded by the New York Film Critics Circle for "Best Non-Fiction Film." Sadly, drummer Richard "Pistol" Allen and keyboard player Johnny Griffith both died before the film's November release. The Funk Brothers original bandleader Joe Hunter passed away in 2007 and latecomer Uriel Jones succumbed to a heart attack in 2009, whittling the original thirteen down to four as of this writing. While the history of soul music has, at least in the writing, been less than generous with the Funk Brothers, time and tide have had no less an effect on the headliners who got all the glory. The alcohol and drug-related deaths of Benny Benjamin and James Jamerson aside, the remainder of the Funk Brothers lived quiet, uncontroversial lives while such Motown all-stars as Marvin Gaye, Jackie Wilson, Tammi Terrell, Mary Wells, Florence Ballard, Jimmy Ruffin, Temptations cofounder Paul Williams, and even Michael Jackson died in dire financial straits or amid protracted controversy and litigation. Those highly publicized tragedies are not the sum and substance of Standing in the Shadows of Motown, which foregrounds The Funk Brothers for the first and last time in recorded history, allowing all thirteen, living and dead, a measure of overdue recognition and respect.
Producer/Director: Paul Justman
Screenplay: Walter Dallas, Ntozake Shange (narration), based on the book by Alan Slutsky
Cinematography: Lon Stratton, Douglas Milsome
Art Direction: Amy Yaroch-Carroll
Film Editing: Anne Erikson
Cast: Richard 'Pistol' Allen, Jack Ashford, Bob Babbitt, Benny 'Papa Zita' Benjamin, Eddie 'Bongo' Brown, Bootsy Collins, Johnny Griffith, Ben Harper, Joe Hunter, Chaka Khan, Joe Messina, James Jamerson.
BW&C-108m.
by Richard Harland Smith
Sources:
Standing in the Shadows of Motown: The Life and Music of Legendary Bassist James Jamerson by Allan Slutsky
Interview with Paul Justman and Allan Slutsky by Greg Burk, LA Weekly
"Tracks of My Tears: A Happy ending for a few of Motown's Funk Brothers," by Raoul Hernandez, Austin City Chronicle, November 15, 2002
Interview with Eddie Willis by Zeth Lundy, Popmatters.com
Standing In the Shadows of Motown - Standing in the Shadows of Love
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Winner of the 2002 award for Best Documentary from the National Society of Film Critics.
Expanded Release in United States November 29, 2002
Limited Release in United States November 15, 2002
Released in United States Fall November 15, 2002
Released in United States May 2002
Released in United States September 2002
Shown at Toronto International Film Festival September 5-14, 2002.
Shown at Tribeca Film Festival, May 8-12, 2002.
Released in United States May 2002 (Shown at Tribeca Film Festival, May 8-12, 2002.)
Released in United States September 2002 (Shown at Toronto International Film Festival September 5-14, 2002.)
Limited Release in United States November 15, 2002
Released in United States Fall November 15, 2002
Expanded Release in United States November 29, 2002