What the Hell Happened to Blood, Sweat & Tears? (2023) Poster

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7/10
what goes up ...
ferguson-627 March 2023
Greetings again from the darkness. "What goes up, must come down" ... those are the opening lyrics to "Spinning Wheel", a huge hit for the brass-rock band Blood, Sweat & Tears. The lyrics are meant to convey the cycles of life, but they also reflect the meteoric rise and fall of the band itself. John Scheinfeld is a knowledgeable and passionate documentarian behind profiles of such acclaimed musicians as Herb Alpert, Brian Wilson, Sergio Mendes, Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, John Lennon, Harry Nilsson, Bette Midler, Rick Nelson, Rosemary Clooney, John Coltrane, Andy Williams, and Dean Martin. He's a natural choice to provide the answers to the titular question.

A 9-piece jazz-rock band hitting the charts big time is not something that could have been predicted in the late 1960's. Scheinfeld opens the film with clips of the band live on stage in Bulgaria in 1970 as David Clayton-Thomas belts out "Spinning Wheel". We learn they were the first American rock band to perform behind the Iron Curtain, and we also learn there is more to the story. Much more. At the time, the United States was in the Vietnam War and social and political unrest and upheaval were occurring regularly. There is every indication that the State Department invoked a strategy of using a popular band to ease tensions in communist countries. It was the legal and visa issues of Canadian singer Clayton-Thomas that provided the opening the State Department needed to pressure the band to undertake the tour with the goal of softening the U. S. reputation as a bullying military force.

Ultimately, it was a tour that turned most everyone on all sides against the band. Romanian concert goers initially enjoyed the 'freeing' aspect of the band's music, but soon the police used dogs to break up the crowds and end the celebration. When the band returned home, the counterculture couldn't forgive them for the tour in communist territory, and the conservative right couldn't forgive them for being against the Vietnam War. Everyone was upset at Blood, Sweat & Tears.

We get a bit of the band's history in that it was founded by Al Kooper in 1967 when they introduced a new sound, however, after the first album, it was determined a new singer was preferred and a very brief audition from Clayton-Thomas secured the job for him. The rest of the band consisted of Jim Fielder on bass, Bobby Colomby on drums, Steve Katz on guitar, Dick Halligan multiple instruments, Jerry Hyman on horns, Fred Lipsius on sax, and trumpeters Chuck Winfiled and Lew Soloff. For the most part, the band members were not politically outspoken. The exception was Steve Katz who was adamantly opposed to the foreign land tour. It was the band's second album that changed everything. Three huge hits - "And When I Die", "You've Made Me So Very Happy", and "Spinning Wheel" - helped them win Album of the Year over the now classic Abbey Road from The Beatles.

Scheinfeld solves another mystery when he explains why, listed as headliners, the band was not featured in the "Woodstock" documentary. Not surprisingly, the answer involves money, and of course, the band members now look back on their manager's decision with some regret. But there is more to the story of the band's faded glory than the communist block tour. An early Las Vegas residency, though a much sought-after gig these days, garnered the label "square" for the band ... this despite performances at the Fillmore and MSG. Although the band never regained the popularity of that second album, they did have subsequent hits that included "Hi-De-Ho" (written by Carole King) and "Go Down Gamblin'". Perhaps most shocking is that more than 65 hours of concert footage was shot on the Iron Curtain tour, yet the State Department shelved the documentary project, likely for political reasons given the police and military activity against concert goers. Bonus points to Scheinfeld for solving a couple of long-term musical mysteries here, and also for including some "Bullwinkle" clips.

Abramorama will release the film in theaters beginning March 24th.
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7/10
the politics of entertainment
MikeyB179319 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Even though I was never a big fan of Blood, Sweat, And Tears (BST) this movie did capture my attention.

In the 1970s they went on a tour of what was then Yugoslavia, Romania, and Poland (Warsaw). They had different degrees of success in each country. And it was the first time a Rock band went on tour behind the Iron Curtain. They did cause a turmoil in some places. I can only imagine what the reception of the Stones would have been like!!! The audience and government found BST a little bit too much, what would they have thought of Mick and the gang!

BST was against the Vietnam War - and had similar "left-wing" positions. But after the tour, they had the effrontery to say that the West and U. S. were still far more liberal and tolerant than these Iron Curtain countries. This brought them criticism from the left (like "Rolling Stone" magazine) who called them pawns of the State Department, the CIA... - and they were still criticized by the conservatives for their anti-Vietnam war stance. So they became the enemy of many disparate groups.

The political parts of the documentary were of interest, but all the praise of BST as being the best rock group since the Beatles was hyperbolic and over the top. It made the documentary overly long.
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10/10
Not just a Rockumentary
jimballentinejb30 September 2023
Not just another story about writing songs or going up against 'The Man'. This is a true story of how a rising star-popular rock band was used as a tool by the Nixon Administration; and the accounts by the artists of how seeing life behind the iron curtain changed these musicians viewpoints. They brought back their eye opening message and told of the stark differences between life under communism and life within a democracy. Blood Sweat and Tears suffered cancel culture decades before it became in vogue, simply for being honest. As a Veteran who experienced first hand the fall of the Iron Curtain, I can tell you ... they got this one right!
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