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Emmylou Harris and Daniel
Lanois perform on the
ASCAP Music Café stage.

Jonny Lang performs.
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Legends
and Rising Stars Kick Off the 2003 Sundance Film
Festival at the ASCAP Music Café
ASCAP music is once again playing a starring role
at the Sundance Film Festival. On Friday, January
17th, the first night of the festival, two ASCAP
members played an outdoor opening kick-off concert,
the first time such an event had been featured
at the festival. Blues prodigy Jonny Lang and
ASCAP writer/composer Mark Isham both treated
audiences to sets on Main Street on an outdoor
stage.
But earlier that day, ASCAP also presented the
first showcase of its 8-day ASCAP Music Café.
This year, ASCAP moved to a new, larger venue,
Plan B-The Nightclub, to accommodate larger audiences.
Singer/songwriters from America and around the
world joined together in giving Festival-goers
the rare chance to see some incredibly talented
up-and-coming artists share the stage with genuine
musical legends.

ASCAP’s Sue Devine and Wade Metzler
with café performers Beth Nielsen Chapman,
Emmylou Harris, Daniel Lanois and ASCAP’s
Loretta Munoz. |
Friday’s line-up included Idaho born-and-bred
folk singer/songwriter Josh Ritter; Former Swedish
pro soccer player turned award-winning solo artist
Nicolai Dunger; one of today’s most successful
(and covered) songwriter/performers Beth Nielsen
Chapman and Welsh-born, Los Angeles-based jazz/pop
artist Judith Owen.
The next day’s sets included those by Ireland’s
Damien Rice, who performed georgous duets with
Lisa Hannigan, a fellow Irish singer; master producer
Daniel Lanois, who performed material from his
upcoming solo album Steel; and guitar
great Jonny Lang, who brought his band along with
him to play some searing blues songs.
On Sunday, Nashville writer/guitarist of Buddy
Miller heated things up with an early set exquisite
country rock. That was followed by another incredible
set by Daniel Lanois and finally, a near awe-inspiring
set by country music legend Emmylou Harris who
was joined on stage by Daniel Lanois. |
Music in the Lens: Wattstax
Not only does music play an important role in
film in the form of scores and soundtracks. But
music is often the subject of many films at Sundance.
This year is no exception. One of the several
music-related documentaries at this year’s
festival is Wattstax, directed by Mel
Stuart. The film is about a concert held on August
20th, 1972 in Los Angeles to commemorate the Watts
riots of 1965. Often referred to as “the
black Woodstock,” the film is a document
of the incredible music that was performed for
the more than 100,000 fans at the Los Angeles
Coliseum that day – from the Bar Kays to
Albert King to Isaac Hayes. But Wattstax
is also a fascinating historical perspective on
the black experience of the late ‘60s and
early ‘70s. What sets this film apart from
other concert films, however, is the fact that
Stuart’s film crews hit the streets of Watts
after the concert and got first-hand interviews
of residents in the neighborhood about what the
music meant to them. All in all, both the music
and the interviews are a blast from the past.
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