A documentary about the role of Native Americans in popular music history.
More
7.8 /10
1168 people rated
Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked The World
2017
R
1 h 43 m
Canada
Dokumentaryo
Musika
A documentary about the role of Native Americans in popular music history.
More
7.8 /10
1168 people rated
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Nangungunang Cast(24)
George Clinton
Self - Musician & Producer
Robbie Robertson
Self - Musician
Robbie Robertson
Self - Mohawk
Gary Giddins
Self - Critic & Biographer
Martin Scorsese
Self - Film Director
Steven Van Zandt
Self - Musician & Radio Host
Joy Harjo
Self - Poet & Musician
Joy Harjo
Self - Muskogee-Creek
Stevie Salas
Self - Guitarist
Stevie Salas
Self - Apache
David Fricke
Self - Rolling Stone Magazine
Wayne Kramer
Self - Guitarist - MC5
Taylor Hawkins
Self - Drummer - Foo Fighters
Beth Wray Webb
Self - Daughter of Link Wray
Sherry Wray
Self - Niece of Link Wray
Ron Welburn
Self - Jazz Historian
Ron Welburn
Self - Gingaskin Cherokee
Ron Welburn
Self - Assateague
Billy Hancock
Self - Rockabilly Musician
Taj Mahal
Self - Musician
Slash
Self - Guitarist
Slash
Self - Guns N' Roses
Iggy Pop
Self - Musician
Antonino D'Ambrosio
Self - Author & Filmmaker
Pagsusuri ng User
Amie❤️❤️💃🏻💃🏻
29/05/2023 08:55
source: Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked The World
user2318973254070
22/11/2022 17:03
This 2017 music documentary currently airing on Netflix is one of the most eye-opening comprehensively succinct programs that I've ever seen. It basically connects all of the rock musical genres together and shows how they evolved as they did. As a fairly astute student of American popular music, I will claim that I was sorely lacking, as far as knowing the degree to which indigenous peoples music formed the American fabric. A must-see for any American music buff!
خود ولا خلي
22/11/2022 17:03
Rumble is an important documentary, foundational to any survey of Native American musics, but it runs out of time before getting to the contributions and influence of Jim Pepper (Kaw/Muskogee Creek) and Don Cherry (Choctaw/African American), both pioneers in the development of experimental jazz and "world" music. Both created important and original bodies of work.
Monther
22/11/2022 17:03
Link Wray and Jimi Hendrix are as much Native American as Iron Eyes Cody!
Robbie Robertson, Redbone, Chuck Billy, et al. Should have been the focus.
Interesting, but lacking!
Mylène
22/11/2022 17:03
Extremely interesting in many many ways, beyond music history.
It touches many aspects of American history and society and the important contributions of the original Americans, which most of us us have heard without knowing.
Could have been more polished technically, but the material is invaluable. I could not stop watching, and being surprised, till the end.
Messie Bombete
22/11/2022 17:03
RUMBLE: THE INDIANS WHO ROCKED THE WORLD (2018) - Catherine Bainbridge and Alfonso Maiorana's interesting Documentary got a brief theatrical release last year, and is now streaming via iTunes, Youtube etc..
Taking it's title from Native American guitarist Link Wray's pounding tune, RUMBLE attempts to show the link from Native American music (particularly its ryhymic aspects) to much of contemporary music. It succeeds to a large degree as it traces how Native Americans and African Americans were often discriminated against and thrust together by larger society (and inter-married). Native American musicians combined with black performers to create the mix of blues and folk to create rock 'n roll.
Some of the connections seem more tenuous than others, but, the history is well told. Interview subjects ranging from Taj Mahal to Buffy St. Marie to Robbie Robertson to Tommy Ramone give insight (Marie and Robertson are of Native American descent). The Doc loses a bit of its focus as it enters the more modern era, but RUMBLE is a solid introduction to this aspect of rock's tangled roots.
oumeyma 🐼
22/11/2022 17:03
I was MOVED. This is a great historical piece that takes you back thru a lot of rock and roll, concert footage, interviews and testimony. You'll be behind the scenes, up close and personal.
wastina
22/11/2022 17:03
This starts with a full on Link Wray appreciation overload as we learn he was half native Indian. It's interesting, but doesn't really feel like sure footing for a feature length documentary. This format continues with Charlie Patton, Hendrix, but it improves with a deep look at white Americas treatment of native Americans and the oppression of their culture... and their music. Utilising some really nice archival footage, it's a story of diversification of people and cultures, the rhythms those people brought with them, the birth of new sounds from those origins and how those sounds came to influence the music we recognise today.
🇵🇰🇲🇿🇺🇸🇸🇩🇿🇦🇩🇿🛫🛬💐
22/11/2022 17:03
Artists discuss the role that Native Americans have played in the development of American popular music.
Very well done documentary. Deeper than expected.
Undoubtedly there are those who already knew/know all this but I'll call it revisionist history because it certainly revised my history of American music.
I only knew of Jim Pepper ('Witchitai-to') and Jesse Ed Davis (with Taj Mahal) before watching this. I knew of Buffy Sainte-Marie but I always felt badly because I couldn't stand her vibrato.
If you have near-musicology level interest in the history of blues, jazz and rock, served with another healthy dose of delightful American cultural history, here you go.
Jarelle Nolwene Elan
22/11/2022 17:03
I saw this film at the Sonoma film fest. There were probably 200 people in the audience and all sat in rapt attention. No one walked out and there was mad applause at the end. A beautiful music and Native American feel good story masterfully told.
Pagsusuri ng User
Amie❤️❤️💃🏻💃🏻
29/05/2023 08:55
source: Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked The World
user2318973254070
22/11/2022 17:03
This 2017 music documentary currently airing on Netflix is one of the most eye-opening comprehensively succinct programs that I've ever seen. It basically connects all of the rock musical genres together and shows how they evolved as they did. As a fairly astute student of American popular music, I will claim that I was sorely lacking, as far as knowing the degree to which indigenous peoples music formed the American fabric. A must-see for any American music buff!
خود ولا خلي
22/11/2022 17:03
Rumble is an important documentary, foundational to any survey of Native American musics, but it runs out of time before getting to the contributions and influence of Jim Pepper (Kaw/Muskogee Creek) and Don Cherry (Choctaw/African American), both pioneers in the development of experimental jazz and "world" music. Both created important and original bodies of work.
Monther
22/11/2022 17:03
Link Wray and Jimi Hendrix are as much Native American as Iron Eyes Cody!
Robbie Robertson, Redbone, Chuck Billy, et al. Should have been the focus.
Interesting, but lacking!
Mylène
22/11/2022 17:03
Extremely interesting in many many ways, beyond music history.
It touches many aspects of American history and society and the important contributions of the original Americans, which most of us us have heard without knowing.
Could have been more polished technically, but the material is invaluable. I could not stop watching, and being surprised, till the end.
Messie Bombete
22/11/2022 17:03
RUMBLE: THE INDIANS WHO ROCKED THE WORLD (2018) - Catherine Bainbridge and Alfonso Maiorana's interesting Documentary got a brief theatrical release last year, and is now streaming via iTunes, Youtube etc..
Taking it's title from Native American guitarist Link Wray's pounding tune, RUMBLE attempts to show the link from Native American music (particularly its ryhymic aspects) to much of contemporary music. It succeeds to a large degree as it traces how Native Americans and African Americans were often discriminated against and thrust together by larger society (and inter-married). Native American musicians combined with black performers to create the mix of blues and folk to create rock 'n roll.
Some of the connections seem more tenuous than others, but, the history is well told. Interview subjects ranging from Taj Mahal to Buffy St. Marie to Robbie Robertson to Tommy Ramone give insight (Marie and Robertson are of Native American descent). The Doc loses a bit of its focus as it enters the more modern era, but RUMBLE is a solid introduction to this aspect of rock's tangled roots.
oumeyma 🐼
22/11/2022 17:03
I was MOVED. This is a great historical piece that takes you back thru a lot of rock and roll, concert footage, interviews and testimony. You'll be behind the scenes, up close and personal.
wastina
22/11/2022 17:03
This starts with a full on Link Wray appreciation overload as we learn he was half native Indian. It's interesting, but doesn't really feel like sure footing for a feature length documentary. This format continues with Charlie Patton, Hendrix, but it improves with a deep look at white Americas treatment of native Americans and the oppression of their culture... and their music. Utilising some really nice archival footage, it's a story of diversification of people and cultures, the rhythms those people brought with them, the birth of new sounds from those origins and how those sounds came to influence the music we recognise today.
🇵🇰🇲🇿🇺🇸🇸🇩🇿🇦🇩🇿🛫🛬💐
22/11/2022 17:03
Artists discuss the role that Native Americans have played in the development of American popular music.
Very well done documentary. Deeper than expected.
Undoubtedly there are those who already knew/know all this but I'll call it revisionist history because it certainly revised my history of American music.
I only knew of Jim Pepper ('Witchitai-to') and Jesse Ed Davis (with Taj Mahal) before watching this. I knew of Buffy Sainte-Marie but I always felt badly because I couldn't stand her vibrato.
If you have near-musicology level interest in the history of blues, jazz and rock, served with another healthy dose of delightful American cultural history, here you go.
Jarelle Nolwene Elan
22/11/2022 17:03
I saw this film at the Sonoma film fest. There were probably 200 people in the audience and all sat in rapt attention. No one walked out and there was mad applause at the end. A beautiful music and Native American feel good story masterfully told.
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