2022, PG-13, 94.
Directed by Frank Marshall, Ryan Suffern, Narrated by , Voices by , Starring .

“A great festival experience that can’t be matched.” That’s the judgment of the late, legendary George Wein, who died last September, before the New Orleans music festival he helped found returned from pandemic hiatus. Wein, producer of the Newport Jazz Festival, had first been consulted in the early Sixties, when Jim Crow made an integrated event impossible. After a decade of false starts, the first New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival opened in 1970, and in 2019 celebrated its 50th anniversary.

That occasion is the subject of Jazz Fest: A New Orleans Story, a vivid documentary that earns its subtitle as a story of its host city. Early on, Ellis Marsalis Jr. (another pandemic casualty) helped recruit local musicians, and he notes that the eclectic festival was never “only” about jazz. An effective portrait might consist simply of a selected 50-year lineup: New Orleans natives Mahalia Jackson and Irma “Soul Queen” Thomas, Marsalis and his four musician sons (in what might have been their last group performance), Herbie Hancock, Rockin’ Dopsie, Al Green, Aaron Neville, Trombone Shorty … and on, and on, and on …

Jazz Fest 2019 featured 7,000 musicians on 14 stages over eight days, so the generous selection here is just a sample. One moving sequence recounts the 2006 festival, a few battered months after Hurricane Katrina. Ben Jaffe of Preservation Hall recalls the “rebuild from below zero,” and the film memorializes Bruce Springsteen’s inspirational repurposing of his hymn for Asbury Park, “My City of Ruins.”

Longtime festival producer Quint Davis (executive producer of the film along with Jimmy Buffett) provides contextual commentary, and film directors Frank Marshall and Ryan Suffern select generously from archival footage. Buffett credits New Orleans with his own maturation (“I’m a child of the Mardi Gras”) and delivers a stirring, scene-specific rendition of “You Can’t Always Get What You Want.” Another celebrant, Katy Perry, accompanies the Gospel Soul Children on “Oh Happy Day” (the choir in their church robes, Perry in a skimpy spacesuit), merging seamlessly into Perry’s “Firework.” Festivals, Austin visitors can testify, create magical juxtapositions, and the leaps from New Orleans, nationwide across the cornucopia of Louisiana foods, and inevitably to Africa (“roots of the roots”) meld a gumbo of cultural flavors.

“You can’t do it but you have to do it,” says Davis of that year’s festival. Filmgoers can pay personal homage to the revival … as they plan their own visit to the Birthplace of Jazz.

***½ 

A note to readers: Bold and uncensored, The Austin Chronicle has been Austin’s independent news source for over 40 years, expressing the community’s political and environmental concerns and supporting its active cultural scene. Now more than ever, we need your support to continue supplying Austin with independent, free press. If real news is important to you, please consider making a donation of $5, $10 or whatever you can afford, to help keep our journalism on stands.

Contributing writer and former news editor Michael King has reported on city and state politics for the Chronicle since 2000. He was educated at Indiana University and Yale, and from 1977 to 1985 taught at UT-Austin. He has been the editor of the Houston Press and The Texas Observer, and has reported and written widely on education, politics, and cultural subjects.