Friday, May 21, 2021

A Band Called Death: The Documentary

This preview originally appeared on The Stranger's Line Out music blog, which disappeared several years ago. I recovered it via The Wayback Machine.

A Band Called Death: The Documentary

death2.jpg
  • Drag City
"Ahead of punk, and ahead of their time."
--Jack White to The New York Times in 2009

If a documentary about Akron duo the Black Keys seems premature--because it is--a documentary about Detroit trio Death is long overdue.

Though most people wouldn't discover them until three decades after the fact, the band of real-deal brothers provides the missing link between the virtuosic rock & roll of Jimi Hendrix in the 1960s and the righteous hardcore of Bad Brains in the '80s. In other words, they were proto-punk, just like their Motor City brethren in the MC5 and the Stooges.

If those white players incorporated jazz and blues into the mix, Death also combined genres in a way that confused '70s listeners, which seems weird in retrospect, since Detroit's Parliament-Funkadelic could also rock up a storm—and even sang about it here—but you could dance to their material.

Death, on the other hand, were capitol-letter ROCK. Not just in the proto-punk sense, but in the Ted Nugent/Alice Cooper sense, to name a couple of one-time Detroit rockers (a gig by the latter, in the wake of Love It to Death, served as a major source of inspiration). It's also worth noting that singer/bassist Bobby Hackney recalls Phil Lynott—a Thin Lizzy/Death tour would've torn shit up good.

Now, almost 40 years after they recorded their first singles, Bobby and Dannis Hackney return in A Band Called Death. In 2009, Drag City issued the singles as ...For the Whole World to See. Buy it! It's essential...especially if Chains and Black Exhaust ranks among your favorite compilations. Since then, they've started gigging again, including a stop at 2011's SXSW. Sadly, founder David Hackney missed all the delayed recognition: he succumbed to cancer in 2000 at the age of 36.

Alas, not everyone shares my affection for the group (the trailer came to my attention via Dirtbombs front man Mick Collins' Twitter feed). In this Line Out thread, a commenter claims that they were "fashionably co-opted, overrated bullshit. Nobody really listens to these guys; they just love to make sure you know that they know." Line Out contributor Derek Erdman agreed; Travis Ritter did not. I haven't picked up the second Death collection, but the first made my 2009 top 10. It sounds just as good today.

The premiere of Jeff Howlett and Mark Covino's A Band Called Death takes place at LA Film Fest (June 14-24). Photo credit: By Death - Original publication: Publicity photo / Immediate source: www.vancouversun.com, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=50569349.

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