 |
Hillel Slovak and Cliff Martinez in TOUGH GUYS Documentary Date 2916 Rating: ****
|
At the end of THE RISE OF THE RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS: OUR BROTHER,
HILLEL, both lead singer Anthony Keidis and bassist Flea say that people
won't forget original lead guitarist and co-founder Hillel Slovak...
Which
would actually be impossible, because no matter what era of the band
you listen to, his colorful punk/funk strumming fervor sustained with
initial replacement Jack Sherman and eventual semi-permanent replacement
John Frusciante, who's 11th hour praise of the late guitarist is one of
the most beautiful interviews in any rock doc, punctuating how much of
an influence the late funky player was... he set the pattern of the
band's sound forever...
 |
| Hillel Slovak and the Red Hot Chili Peppers in TOUGH GUYS |
And yet, beginning in a kind of old
school prog-rock band, we never really learn how Slovak went from that
1970's chunky power-chord rock sound to the new wave techno sound of his
in-between band What Is This to the funk-filled discovery of what glued
the band together...
That's most likely because he had passed
away after their third album (HIS second with the band), and what's left
are sporadic diary entries and a few words from his former girlfriend
(a widow of sorts) and a lookalike brother... But mostly this doc
centers on both Kiedis and Flea about how the band formed, and it all
began with seeing Slovak playing in that band in high school... before
either were musicians, or even wanted to be...
 |
| Hillel Slovak and the Red Hot Chili Peppers in TOUGH GUYS |
Then kind of
wisping through the beginning stages of the band's formation that
included hanging out and getting stoned... which inevitably leads to a
few rushed recollections of drug abuse by band members... Which
isn't bad since things don't drag or get too wordy or preachy or
melodramatic... nor does the doc rely on that kind of new
author-intrusive device of the interviewees pretending to be shocked
about something revealed by the interviewer...
The only genuine
perspective comes from the two survivors of a band that blew up after a
decade of LA nightclub punk-rock beginnings shown in a collage of
interesting artwork and just enough music for what's both a tribute and
testament.
 |
| Hillel Slovak and the Red Hot Chili Peppers in TOUGH GUYS |
 |
| Hillel Slovak and the Red Hot Chili Peppers in TOUGH GUYS with Flea and Anthony Kiedes |
 |
| Hillel Slovak and the Red Hot Chili Peppers in TOUGH GUYS with Flea and Anthony Kiedes |
 |
| Hillel Slovak and the Red Hot Chili Peppers in TOUGH GUYS with Flea and Anthony Kiedes |
 |
Hillel Slovak and the Red Hot Chili Peppers in TOUGH GUYS
|
 |
| Hillel Slovak and the Red Hot Chili Peppers in TOUGH GUYS |
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.