WATTSTAX:
The Resurrection of a Historic Musical Event
by Marshall Bowden
Read
the Jazzitude Review of The Ultimate Isaac Hayes: Can You
Dig It?
Wattstax was the largest gathering of African-Americans
in one place since the civil rights March on Washington
in 1963. The 1965 Watts riots had provided a glimpse of
what was to happen in major cities across America in the
latter half of the decade. Interestingly, in August of ’75
Wilson Pickett, the Astors, and Booker T and the MGs were
in town playing a Stax Review concert at Watts 5/4 Ballroom,
a 700-capacity house. Most of the artists leave right after
the show, but Booker T and the MGs stay to record some sides
and witness National Guard Troops sprinting through the
streets of LA—the very beginnings of the Watts rioting
By 1972 some of the anger that fueled those riots had helped
the African-American community make significant social progress.
Statements of ‘blackness’ were everywhere: it
was in October of 1968 that Olympic gold medallist Tommie
Smith and bronze John Carlos gave a black power salute during
the Olympic medal ceremonies. The politically and socially
charged atmosphere was also reflected in American black
popular music, which began to break down barriers of both
race and genre that had been maintained, largely, by the
recording industry itself. New styles that melded many elements
of various black music genres began to appear, including
soul and, slightly later, funk.
In ’72 the vibe was a bit less hard-edged
than it had been a few years previous, but black leaders
generally recognized that there was still much work to be
done. White rock promoters had succeeded in hosting very
large and peaceful gatherings of young people such as the
Monterey International Pop Festival and Woodstock, though
there was also the tragedy of Altamont to consider. Interestingly,
at a time when black pop music was experiencing a renaissance,
these festivals featured few black performers. Richie Havens,
who presented a blues/folk element, and Jimi Hendrix spring
instantly to mind. And there was Otis Redding’s excellent
set at Monterey, a clip of which is often included in rock
history documentaries as evidence of the diversity of the
performers found at these hippie festivals. But the fact
is that there were really very few black performers at these
types of event, and Wattstax was seen as a way to showcase
the remarkable performers on the Stax Records roster at
the time, and to combine an outdoor soul music festival,
fundraiser, and documentary film into one glorious project.
Stax
and its co-owner, Al Bell, were interested in partnering
with the Watts Summer Festival. Conceived in 1966 and incorporated
in 1968, the Watts Summer Festival is the oldest African
American cultural festival in the United States. WSF and
Stax (along with sponsor Joseph Schlitz Brewing Company)
became the first groups to promote a sold out black even
of this magnitude. The Los Angeles Coliseum, holding 100,000
people, was sold out The Stax roster of performers—very
nearly all of it—would perform for free. Admission
would be $1.00, and the security force would be entirely
black and unarmed. Security was headed by Melvin Van Peebles,
filmmaker and Stax recording artist. Ticket sales totaled
some $73,000, which was give tno the Sickle Cell Anemia
Foundation, Martin Luther King Hospital, and the Watts Labor
Community Action Committee. Said Bell: “There’s
a thread running through much of the music that came out
of Stax that was uplifting’ it was music that made
you feel good.” Wattstax was “another attempt
at making people feel good, and at the risk of sounding
egotistical, that is what set us apart from a log of other
people. We had the audacity to dream dreams, and to work
toward turning those dreams into realities.”
Mel Stuart was chosen as the director of the
documentary film that Bell & Co. hoped would become
a successful spin-off of the project, much as the Woodstock
film and soundtrack recording had done. Stuart had made
the documentary Rise & Fall of the Third Reich
and had just recently finished Willy Wonka & the
Chocolate Factory, perhaps his best-known work. Producer
Dave Wolper recommended Stuart due to his documentary film
experience. After the concert had been filmed, Stuart viewed
the rough edit of the concert and informed Bell that the
finished work was an unremarkable concert film. What Stuart
proposed to do was go out into the Watts community and film
ordinary people talking about their experiences living in
Watts, and the experience of being black in America in general.
He sought out a number of unknon, amateur actors from the
area for the interviews, feeling that they would be better
able to express themselves naturally in front of a camera.
Says Stuart: “I said to them, ‘the black experience
is something I’m not familiar with. But I’ll
take care of how to make the film. The philosophy—I
will be guided by you.’”
In addition to the man-on –the street
interviews, Stuart also filmed the rapidfire routines of
little-known (at the time) comedian Richard Pryor to a series
of words Stuart fed him (the concept reminds me of a sketch
Pryor and Chevy Chase did on Saturday Night Live, in which
Pryor is a job interviewee subjected to a word association
test by Chase. In response to the word ‘nigger’
Pryor’s response is ‘dead honky.’). The
result, oddly enough, seems to give off a palpable feeling
of what it must have been like to live in the black enclave
of a major urban American center at that time. The ethos
of the times is reflected by the clothing, language, and
attitudes of the people interviewed, as well as by the music
presented onstage.
The morning of the show, the Watts Festival
parade was held, with Isaac Hayes as the Grand Marshal.
The concert began with the playing of the Star Spangled
Banner, for which the bulk of the audience remained seated,
talking, eating, doing whatever. When vocalist Kim Weston
stepped forward to sing “Lift Every Voice,”
generally cited as the ‘black national anthem,’
everyone stood. Stax wanted to feature as much of its talent
as possible, so sets were very brief. Not all of the 40
or so acts made it onto the stage (some, such as Johnnie
Taylor, had performances filmed elsewhere, further enhancing
the film’s content outside the bounds of a strict
concert film), but most did. There was as varied a cross-section
of music as at predominantly white festivals such as Woodstock
or Monterey. Wattstax featured gospel performers such as
the Rance Allen Group and the Staple Singers, bluesmen such
as Little Sonny and Albert King, R&B mainstayrs like
Carla Thomas, Rufus Thomas, and Johnnie Taylor, pop acts
like the Newcomers, and funksters like the Bar-Kays. And,
of course, there was Isaac Hayes, recently an Academy Award
winner and one of the top acts in the music business at
the time. Hayes came onstage at sundown and led his band
through a high-powered set that ended the festival on a
high note.
For a variety of reasons, Wattstax was not
as well covered at the time as either Woodstock or Monterey,
even though the entire event went off without any real hitches
and there were no security incidents. A minor problem ensued
when Rufus Thomas got the crowd spilling out onto the field
during his “Do the Funky Chicken.” Everyone
was afraid a general melee would begin, but the unflappable
Thomas worked the crowd with his old-school chitlin’
circuit charm and good humor. “Don’t jump the
fence/it don’t make no sense” he intoned, and,
lo and behold, the crowd obeyed. Perhaps it was the sight
of Thomas sporting a hot pink cape and hot pants as well
as go go boots. Who could be angry or aggressive faced with
such a Bacchanalian sight?
Stax itself experience extreme cash flow problems
in 1974 and 1975, landing in bankruptcy court. Its master
tapes were sold at auction in 1977 for $1.3 million, a fraction
of their value, to California-based Concord Records. The
film version of Wattstax, which had grossed around $1 million
in theaters, went out of circulation and became unavailable
for years due to legal wrangling. A new DVD version was
issued in 2004 as well as a 3-CD soundtrack that restores
many performances to the album (Isaac Hayes is only represented
by ‘Theme from Shaft,’ with the rest of his
one hour performance released on a separate disc, Isaac
Hayes at Wattstax). But the event was a highly significant
one, and an influence on later black musical artists, including
Chuck D and Public Enemy. Chuck can be heard on one of the
DVD’s commentary tracks, and his commentary is illuminating.
Emphasizing the fact that this was a time
in which there was real unity in the black community and
in which musical boundaries became less and less important,
is Jesse Jackson’s introduction to Isaac Hayes: “Today
on this program you will hear gospel and rhythm and blues
and jazz. All those are just labels. We know that music
is music.” The re-emergence of the Wattstax film and
recent collections of music by some of its stars, including
Isaac Hayes and Rufus Thomas couldn’t come at a better
time, refreshing the memories of those who were there at
the time, and providing historic insight for those who came
along later.