HomeMusic Soul Survivor

Soul Survivor

James Brown  Main Performer

See full product details
Choose a format:
Previous
  • DVD   $15.25
  • Previously Viewed - DVD   $2.44
  • Used - DVD   $6.99

Previously Viewed - DVD

Out of Stock.

List Price: $3.99

$2.44 You Save: $1.55

Add to Wish List Share with a Friend
Next
Track
Listen
1 A Mark on My Back [DVD]    
2 Augusta, Georgia [DVD]    
3 A Way Out [DVD]    
4 The Street Kid [DVD]    
5 I Feel That Old Feeling Coming On [DVD]    
6 Please Please Please [DVD]    
7 Try Me [DVD] Brown  
8 Kansas City [DVD]    
9 Prisoner of Love [DVD] Gaskill/Robin/Colum  
10 The James Brown Show [DVD]    
11 Papa's Got a Brand New Bag [DVD] Brown  
12 Don't Be a Drop Out [DVD]    
13 Georgia on My Mind [DVD] Gorrell/Carmichael  
14 Cold Sweat [DVD] Brown/Ellis  
15 It's a Man's, Man's, Man's World [DVD] Newsome/Brown  
16 Say It Loud - I'm Black and I'm Proud [DVD]    
17 Hot Pants [DVD]    
18 I Got That Feeling [DVD]    
19 Black Caesar [DVD]    
20 World [DVD]    
21 The Blues Brothers [DVD]    
22 On Trial and in Jail [DVD]    
23 Unity/Get on the Good Foot [DVD]    
24 Bonus Material [DVD][*]    
  • Overview
  • Production Details
  • Editorial Reviews
Soul Survivor

DVD

Label: Polydor

Style: Soul

Soul Survivor

UPC: 602498091661

Release Date: 03/09/2004

Original Release Date: 03/09/2004

Number of Discs: 1

Tracks: [A Mark on My Back [DVD], Augusta, Georgia [DVD], A Way Out [DVD], The Street Kid [DVD], I Feel That Old Feeling Coming On [DVD], Please Please Please [DVD], Try Me [DVD], Kansas City [DVD], Prisoner of Love [DVD], The James Brown Show [DVD], Papa's Got a Brand New Bag [DVD], Don't Be a Drop Out [DVD], Georgia on My Mind [DVD], Cold Sweat [DVD], It's a Man's, Man's, Man's World [DVD], Say It Loud - I'm Black and I'm Proud [DVD], Hot Pants [DVD], I Got That Feeling [DVD], Black Caesar [DVD], World [DVD], The Blues Brothers [DVD], On Trial and in Jail [DVD], Unity/Get on the Good Foot [DVD], Bonus Material [DVD][*]]
Contributors:

Richie Unterberger

Originally broadcast on television as part of the American Masters series, this is a straightforward 90-minute documentary of Brown's life, roughly timed with the 50th anniversary of his entry into professional music. Excerpts from performance footage dating back to the 1960s (none of them too extensive) are interspersed with interviews with Brown and lots of people he's worked with, known, and influenced, including Fred Wesley, Bobby Byrd, Little Richard, Chuck D, Dan Aykroyd, Reverend Al Sharpton, and some less expected insiders, like Marva Whitney and Lyn Collins (who sang and toured as part of his revue). There are also voice-over excerpts from Brown's autobiography, read by an actor rather than the Godfather of Soul himself, which is a good thing considering that Brown's speech frankly wasn't very easy to understand by the time this documentary was filmed. That diminishes the watchability of the contemporary interviews with Brown, though to be honest the other interviewees have more of interest to say. In keeping with the way many such celebrity documentaries go, there's a touch of worshipful tone in some of the praise heaped upon him. Yet at least some of the less savory aspects of his career and personality aren't glossed over; the arrests and jail sentences are covered, but also the point is made that Brown was a demanding and, at times, difficult person for whom to work. Some of the performance clips are so exciting -- his 1964 slot at The T.A.M.I. Show, his 1968 Boston TV performance right after Martin Luther King, Jr.'s assassination, an early-'70s show at a prison -- that one does hunger to see more of these, particularly since the more extensive excerpts of a February 2003 concert at the House of Blues in Los Angeles and a rehearsal from the same period aren't nearly as galvanizing. The DVD has an hour of bonus footage, and while the concert portion of this (five songs from the House of Blues show, three songs from the rehearsal) isn't too vital, it also has interesting additional interview material with eight of the subjects questioned for the documentary. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi