The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975 

http://www.eastbayexpress.com/ebx/the-black-power-mixtape-1967-1975/Content?oid=2993526
 

What Nixon and the FBI didn't want us to see. 
By Kelly Vance 
September 21, 2011 



The art houses have seen a steady stream of "Baby Boomer history lessons" 
recently, as if that overbearing, fascinating, endlessly self-absorbed 
generation were hurrying to put the finishing touches on its official 
documentary legacy before shuffling off to that big Woodstock in the sky. They 
come from every angle imaginable — visual arts and feminism ( !Women Art 
Revolution ), literary hijinks ( Magic Trip ), Latin American politics ( 
Nostalgia for the Light ), folk music ( Phil Ochs: There but for Fortune ), 
rock music ( Ladies and Gentlemen ... The Rolling Stones ), hippie Berkeley-ana 
( Saint Misbehavin': The Wavy Gravy Movie ), etc. 

But The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975 is unique. It gathers together a treasure 
trove of original film footage produced for Swedish television and shot in the 
US during that tempestuous period of American history, when the Black Power 
movement, anti-Vietnam-war protests, rebellious students, and a general 
resistance to authority captured the attention of the world — especially in 
Sweden, where in the words of filmmaker Göran Hugo Olsson, documentary-makers 
reacted "with a combination of commitment and naïveté" to the upheavals across 
the Atlantic. 

The gift Olsson's doc gives us is to see ourselves as others see us. The 
"global perspective" makes even the most over-analyzed events seem fresh. And 
so when Stokely Carmichael and Angela Davis calmly and persuasively explain 
their discontent with the enigma that is America, we can listen to them with 
different ears, through that Swedish filter. Assembled by Olsson from archival 
sources, Mixtape presents the kind of news reports we very seldom saw in the US 
in those days, particularly on TV. The Swedes' point of view is intriguing 
because they don't have the same preconceptions as Americans. That distance, 
however, did not protect Sweden's state-run TV from being labeled as 
"anti-American" by none other than TV Guide . (Indeed, that Scandinavian 
country's skepticism of official American policy was a sore point with 
Washington — in 1972, when Prime Minister Olof Palme publicly denounced the US 
bombing of Hanoi, the US State Department angrily froze diplomatic relations 
with Sweden for more than a year.) 




The filmmakers, who include co-producer Danny Glover, added a 2011 commentary 
track from people inspired by the era, among them singers Erykah Badu and Harry 
Belafonte, hip-hop artist Talib Kweli, and actor/director Melvin Van Peebles. 
Amir "Questlove" Thompson's music soundtrack is superb. But the voices from the 
past are what really count. This is the first time most of us have had a chance 
to hear Carmichael, Eldridge Cleaver, and radical filmmaker Emile de Antonio ( 
In the Year of the Pig , Point of Order ), who offers a scathing summation of 
the political situation. We visit Oakland, Harlem, and Hallandale, Florida, and 
listen to returned Vietnam vets, Malcolm X, attorney William Kunstler, 
performer Abiodun Oyewole of the Last Poets, and Lewis Michaux, the proprietor 
of an African-American bookshop. These are the men and women Richard Nixon, J. 
Edgar Hoover, and the networks didn't want us to know about. 

The 16mm footage is beautiful — that grainy, fast film conveys immediacy 
differently than digital — and filmmaker Olsson's intentions are beyond 
reproach. In his "Director's Notes," he states: "The people in the film changed 
the world for the better. Not only for black people in America, or any 
marginalized group, but for all people." Catch The Black Power Mixtape before 
it slips away. 





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