Now we're movie critics?  Might come as a shocker to some but Scorsese and
Stone turned down the opportunity to direct or even fund Hi Tech Soul. 

Are some of us that self righteous and petty that we must cut down
everything that is attempting to make a difference?  Outside this list most
of the world knows nothing about Detroit, it's influence on Electronica or
the people that made it happen. You are going to criticize a documentary
calling it shoddy? Really, name one that isn't kind of shoddy (please don't
you dare reference a Michael Moore documentary here).  If you must wage an
attack on what I will call "reference material", then do so because it fails
to provide facts or because it is biased.

I personally haven't had the opportunity to see it.  I personally can't
wait.  When I do see it I will take it for what it's worth...a low budget
film.  I will take what I can learn from it and pump it to all these kids
that think this music culture is about drugs, fashion and who's been to more
parties.  

So I ask, can anyone that has seen this film tell us about the content?


Jason Trolian


-----Original Message-----
From: Dan Bean [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, July 18, 2006 7:03 AM
To: 313@hyperreal.org
Subject: Re: (313) HIGH TECH SOUL DVD

I (and some people on this list) went to see this film in London last year.

It was shoddy and amateurish.

Maybe they've totally re-shot and re-edited it since then...

And for the record, it's not the first film to 'tackle the deep roots of
techno music'.




You wrote:
> HIGH TECH SOUL DVD
> 
> Directed by Gary Bredow, HIGH TECH SOUL is the first film to to tackle 
> the deep roots of techno music and the city that spawned it: Detroit.
> With Juan Atkins, Derrick May, Kevin Saunderson and many more.
> 
> "Bredow's cast of alumni -- the holy trinity of Atkins, May and 
> Saunderson at the front -- fill out this tale with passion, pride and, 
> oddly for music of the future, nostalgia too." - Dazed & Confused
> 
> HIGH TECH SOUL is the first documentary to tackle the deep roots of 
> techno music alongside the cultural history of Detroit, its birthplace.
>  From the race riots of 1967 to the underground party scene of the 
> late 1980s, Detroit's economic downturn didn't stop the invention of a 
> new kind of music that brought international attention to its 
> producers and their hometown.
> 
> Featuring in-depth interviews with many of the world's best exponents 
> of the artform, High Tech Soul focuses on the creators of the genre -- 
> Juan Atkins, Derrick May, and Kevin Saunderson -- and looks at the 
> relationships and personal struggles behind the music. Artists like 
> Richie Hawtin, Jeff Mills, Carl Craig, Eddie Fowlkes and a host of 
> others explain why techno, with its abrasive tones and resonating 
> basslines, could not have come from anywhere but Detroit.
> 
> With classic anthems such as Rhythim Is Rhythim's "Strings of Life" 
> and Inner City's "Good Life," High Tech Soul celebrates the pioneers, 
> the promoters and the city that spawned a global phenomenon.
> 
> Soundtrack Includes: Aux 88, Cybotron, Inner City, Juan Atkins, 
> Mayday, Model 500, Plastikman, Rhythim Is Rhythim, and more!
> 
> The film features: Juan Atkins, Derrick May, Kevin Saunderson, Eddie
> (Flashin) Fowlkes, Richie Hawtin, Jeff Mills, John Acquaviva, Carl 
> Cox, Carl Craig, Blake Baxter, Stacey Pullen, Thomas Barnett, Matthew 
> Dear, Anthony "Shake" Shakir, Keith Tucker, Delano Smith, Mike Archer, 
> Derrick Thompson, Mike Clark, Alan Oldham, Laura Gavoor, Himawari, 
> Scan 7, Kenny Larkin, Stacey "Hotwax" Hale, Claus Bachor, Electrifying 
> Mojo, Niko Marks, Barbara Deyo, Dan Sordyl, Sam Valenti, Ron Murphy, 
> George Baker, and Kwame Kilpatrick.
> 
> 
> http://www.hightechsoul.com
> 
> 
> also look out for
> Submerge: Live In Japan DVD
> 
> 
> 




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