The Wrecking Crew:  without a doubt the best music documentary made to date. By Patrick O’Heffernan

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In the late forties and early 50’s, thousands of men who had returned home from World War II found that the Midwest farms and Southern towns and even the Texas oil patch could not support their families.  So they headed to Southern California to work in the burgeoning aircraft industry, often with guitars and drum kits strapped on top of their cars. When they got there they found year-round sunshine, surfing, bikinis,  an auto-obsessed culture and an attitude of openness and risk taking.  So when songs like Shake Rattle and Roll, Rocket 88 and Rock Around the Clock began breaking down the barriers against  the new rock music form, they embraced it, popularizing what was first called the “California Sound” and then simply,  “rock and roll”. Unknowingly, they kicked off a musical revolution that spread around the world.

At the center of that revolution was a group of twenty to thirty men – and one woman – who were the unknown and uncredited session musicians on thousands of the recordings from the 50’s to the 70’s – the birth years of rock and roll.  In addition to playing the music on the 45’s and albums that bore the names of famous bands like the Monkees and the Beach Boys and Sonny and Cher, they sometimes taught those people how to play, even though they were teaching themselves because no one really knew how to play rock and roll.  The titular leader of this shifting group of musical geniuses was the brilliant and funny guitarist Tommy Tedesco who died in 1997.

The film The Wrecking Crew, directed by his son Denny Tedesco,  is the story of his father and the musicians who brought the nation rock and roll. It opens in Los Angeles, Orange County, New York and other cities on March 13th.

Eighteen years in the making, The Wrecking Crew features interviews with the band members, stars like Cher and Nancy Sinatra (whose hit “These Boots Were Made for Walking” was given its punchy baseline by Wrecking Crew bass player Carole Kaye) and Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys, plus music, music, music.  Watching  The Wrecking Crew is like listening to the soundtrack of America .

Few music fans realized that the people playing on the 45’s they bought (or their parents bought)  were often not the bands shown on the cover.  The Wrecking Crew were known to LA and New York and Nashville producers as being able to play anything – just show them the music – and make it sound like a hit.  Six years in a row in the 1960s and early 1970s, the Grammy for “Record of the Year” went to Wrecking Crew recordings.  More often than not during those years, as many as half of the top ten records of the year were recorded by the Wrecking Crew – and no one knew their names. And the film shows how they did it – often cutting three or four or five songs  – and sometimes an entire album – in a day, running from studio to studio laying down tracks live on tape from early morning to after midnight.

This remarkable film brings together archival footage, personal interviews with bands and producers done over several years, a round table discussion with the four key band members and many, many loving scenes with the legendary and irascible Tommy Tedesco to tell the story of the music form that came to dominate the world. The favorite songs of a generation are all here, presented by the people who made them, with the back stories like the admission by the Beatles producer that Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band was an attempt to better the music produced by the Wrecking Crew session musicians.

Whether it was the backbeat, the baseline, the melody or the entire musical recording save for the vocals, the Wrecking Crew players created many of the #1 hits of the 1960s.  It didn’t matter if it was Nat “King” Cole, Frank Sinatra, Nancy Sinatra, The Monkees, The Byrds or The Beach Boys, they brought the flair and musicianship that made the American “west coast sound”  and later just “rock”, a dominant cultural force around the world.  And the film captures that magic perfectly, giving us intimate insight into the session musicians themselves, producers like Phil Spector, bands like the T-bones (created by the Wrecking Crew), and stars like Cher.

Denny Tedesco has not only given us what may become the most important musical history of our time, but a love letter to his dad, without whom we would not be dancing.  The Wrecking Crew will make you laugh, cry and tap your feet; it is without a doubt, the best music documentary I have seen.

Patrick O’Heffernan.  Host, Music Friday Live.

 

THE WRECKING CREW 

Directed by Denny Tedesco, produced by Denny Tedesco, Suzie Greene Tedesco

Running Time: 102 minutes.  Rating: PG For language thematic elements and smoking images.

Distributed by  Magnolia Pictures

http://www.magpictures.com/thewreckingcrew/

 

Los Angeles release date: March 13, 2015 at The Nuart Theatre in West L.A., and the South Coast Village 3 in Santa Ana. 

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