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Various Artists - 2010 - The Chess Records Saga
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Here is an excellent vintage bootleg with a great documentary about Chess Records, Recommended for fans.
Please enjoy, share with friends and please seed :) > i can't do it all alone! You can help by keeping this music alive :) I really want to share more rare stuff that is not available in shops, but i need your help to keep my collection alive for all, now over 1600 concerts still available for you!
Stuff like this needs to be preserved for future generations of music lovers. Thanks to all the peers from everywhere seeding my huge archive, i love you! Look for my music archive here: https://1337x.to/user/GRNS3/=============
Roll over Beethoven: The Chess Records Saga 2010-11-12 BBC documentary
Lineage: DVB-Cable(BBC)>Thomson DC/62UPC>Scart>Philips DVDR3600>DVD>PC Additional editing: TMPGEnc Authoring Works 4 (menu/5 min. chapters)
Video: PAL 25 fps, I/L TFF, 16:9 (720 x 576), MPEG2 7324-7347 kbps Audio: AC3 CBR, 48000Hz 256 kb/s tot , stereo (2/0) (GSpot)
Roll over Beethoven: The Chess Records Saga
Chicago's Chess Records was one of the greatest labels of the post-war era, ranking alongside other mighty independents like Atlantic, Stax and Sun. From 1950 till its demise at the end of the 60s, Chess released a myriad of electric blues, rock 'n' roll and soul classics that helped change the landscape of black and white popular music.
Chess was the label that gave the world such sonic adventurers as Chuck Berry, Muddy Waters, Bo Diddley, Howlin' Wolf and Etta James. In this documentary to mark the label's 60th anniversary, the likes of Jimmy Page, Mick Hucknall, Public Enemy's Chuck D, Paul Jones and Little Steven, as well as those attached to the label such as founder's son Marshall Chess, pay tribute to its extraordinary music and influence.
The documentary reveals how two Polish immigrants, Leonard and Phil Chess, forged friendships with black musicians in late 1940s Chicago, shrewdly building a speciality blues label into a huge independent worth millions by the end of the 1960s. Full of vivid period detail, it places the Chess story within a wider social and historical context - as well as being about some of the greatest music ever recorded, it is, inevitably, about race in America during these tumultuous times.