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New on DVD
20 to Life: The Life and Times of John Sinclair
MVD
By
JEFF TAMARKIN
|
October 1, 2011
20 TO LIFE: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF JOHN SINCLAIR
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3.0
Stars
John Sinclair was the poster boy for the radicalization of American youth in the ’60s. Looking like a character out of a
Furry Freak Brothers
comic, he co-founded the White Panther Party, managed the proto-punk MC5 and, most notoriously, became a victim of the Nixon government’s war on hippies. Convicted of handing over two joints to an undercover narc in 1969, Sinclair was sentenced to up to 10 years in prison. It took the intervention of John Lennon, who in 1971 headlined a benefit concert to spread awareness of his ludicrous situation, for the threat of lengthy incarceration to disappear: three days later, Sinclair was sprung, after 29 months in the clink. Steve Gebhardt’s documentary follows his trajectory from jazz/R&B–loving young Michiganite “surrounded by whiteness” to countercultural hero to, now, sharp-minded graybeard who spends much of his time maniacally reciting blues poetry over the backing of improvising musicians and playing his beloved jazz and blues on the radio. Gebhardt intercuts vintage footage with contemporary interviews (MC5’s Wayne Kramer; Sinclair’s ex-wife, Leni) and a running commentary from Sinclair, who alternately revisits his old haunts in Detroit and Ann Arbor and tours blues landmarks of the South as he recalls his exploits. Sinclair emerged from the ’60s with his ideals intact. He eventually left Michigan for New Orleans (he now resides in Amsterdam), but his message and mission remain intact and timely.
Related
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Radical night out in Portland
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Making change
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The new McCarthyism
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Radical night out in Portland
“People are upset about Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib,” Noam Chomsky told 750 people packed into the Woodfords Congregational Church last Saturday night, “but if you’re concerned about human rights, take a walk into a maximum-security prison.”
Making change
John Sinclair’s poem “Ask Me Now” leaves little question about the poet’s values.
The new McCarthyism
We were going to write in praise of fired CIA official Mary O. McCarthy for her assumed role in leaking the details of the Bush Administration’s network of overseas secret prisons for captured terrorist suspects, but then the admirable lady threw a monkey wrench into our plans by denying that she had done so.
Johnny Cash
Johnny Cash at San Quentin was a huge hit in 1969.
Gridiron Gang
A former college football star turned prison guard trying to make a difference in a juvenile-detention lock-up turns kids onto the game. Sound like a cog out of the feel-good factory? Watch the trailer for Gridiron Gang (QuickTime)
Prisoners of politics
The giant sucking sound that all of Southern Maine heard coming from Forest Avenue last week was not some accidental draining of a huge milk tank at Oakhurst Dairy, but the integrity and independence of Maine’s largest public university going down the toilet. Slideshow: Thomas Manning's exhibit at the University of Southern Maine Brut portraiture: Inmate Manning's art part of outsider tradition. By Ian Paige
Greatest reality hits
To be read while listening to Green Day’s “Time of Your Life” or Mary Hopkin’s “Those Were The Days, My Friend."
Fighting words
Imagine that suicide bombers have just blasted three American shopping malls.
The Dhamma Brothers
Since the US has more people in prison than any other country, shouldn’t we be working on an effective method of rehabilitation?
Three prison-reform events
Three events centered on Martin Luther King Day will kick off a prison-reform movement in Maine.
Pressure rising - side
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Topics
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New on DVD
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Criminal Sentencing and Punishment
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Prisons
,
Richard Nixon
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Criminal Sentencing and Punishment
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Richard Nixon
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John Lennon
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John Sinclair
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Wayne Kramer
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White Panther Party
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ARTICLES BY JEFF TAMARKIN
NEW YORK DOLLS | DANCING BACKWARDS IN HIGH HEELS
| March 17, 2011
The new New York Dolls have now been around longer - and released more albums (three) - than the old New York Dolls, and they're commemorating that new longevity by letting go of any compulsion they may have still harbored to honor their designation as "punk-rock progenitors."
BLACK JOE LEWIS & THE HONEYBEARS | SCANDALOUS
| March 09, 2011
The soul revival has been going on long enough now that maybe it's a not a bad idea to stop calling it a revival at all.
BRYAN FERRY | OLYMPIA
| October 19, 2010
From the Kate Moss cover pic to the A-list of guest stars to the reunion with original Roxy Music members Brian Eno, Phil Manzanera, and Andy Mackay, Olympia screams, "EVENT!"
OLD 97'S | THE GRAND THEATRE
| October 12, 2010
When Old 97's are on — which they are most of the time on their eighth studio album — they're very, very on.
DAR WILLIAMS | MANY GREAT COMPANIONS
| October 05, 2010
The companions of the title are Dar Williams's songs, which the singer-songwriter revisits here two different ways.
See all articles by:
JEFF TAMARKIN
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