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Cadillac records
Cadillac records











cadillac records cadillac records

There was always blues in the US in the 20th century, but it grew steadily, out of sorrow and bad days and nights and hate and love gone bad or good for African Americans. The best thing about Cadillac Records, the thing that will have me go back and watch it again more than anything, is that it captures what it was like to be around the one of the significant blues explosions in America. There's an attitude to a kind of music, whether it's punk or jazz or psychedelic rock or even in "wtf" mode in I'm Not There. Sometimes all we can hope for is that they get the mood right, and even that isn't attained some years back the wildly over-praised Ray had strong performances but, to me, didn't really capture that feel of what it was like to be in the midst of something really spectacular- we only saw it being great for Ray Charles (not that his music didn't help the movie, somewhat besides the point). The best bio-pics on musicians tend to get it just about right (Bird, Sid & Nancy, The Doors, Walk the Line) even if the films aren't great or, even worse, have those tired old conventions of real-life people fit in tidy fashion for a 2-hour storyline. It's hard to get a feel for a specific time and period in movies let alone an actual mood of a particular music. Reviewed by Quinoa1984 8 / 10 sure, it may have it's share of clichés and pit-falls, but it makes you feel the Blues, deep down your spine, long after you leave













Cadillac records