Updated
Updated · The A.V. Club · Jun 6
Questlove's 2021 'Summer of Soul' Revived 1969 Harlem Festival, Probing 50 Years of Black History Neglect
Updated
Updated · The A.V. Club · Jun 6

Questlove's 2021 'Summer of Soul' Revived 1969 Harlem Festival, Probing 50 Years of Black History Neglect

3 articles · Updated · The A.V. Club · Jun 6

Summary

  • Questlove’s breakout as a filmmaker came with “Summer of Soul,” which unearthed long-unused footage from the 1969 Harlem Music Festival and reframed it as both concert film and historical inquiry.
  • The documentary asks why a major Black music celebration in Harlem—held around the same time as Woodstock—was largely forgotten while Woodstock became canonized in popular memory.
  • Archival performances by Stevie Wonder, Nina Simone, Mahalia Jackson, The Staple Singers, Gladys Knight & The Pips and others drive the film’s musical core while supporting its argument about media neglect.
  • By pairing the restored footage with questions about who gets remembered, the film broadens from a festival chronicle into a critique of how significant moments in Black history were overlooked.

Insights

After an EWF documentary, which forgotten cultural moments will Questlove's award-winning lens bring to light next?
From Oscar-winning docs to Disney's 'Aristocats,' can Questlove translate his historical storytelling to live-action fiction?