The Rock Concert That Captured an Era
Featuring acts such as the Beach Boys, James Brown and the Rolling Stones, The T.A.M.I. Show defined popular music for a generation
- By Daniel Eagan
- Smithsonian.com, March 19, 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Detroit soul was represented by Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Marvin Gaye and the Supremes. The first two were touring together in a Motown Records revue; Robinson had been the first artist producer that Berry Gordy had signed to the label. Already a bona fide star, Gaye, a part-time session drummer as well as a singer and composer, would blossom into one of the great talents in soul music on the strength of songs like “What's Going On.” The Supremes—Diana Ross, Mary Wilson, and Florence Ballard—were in the midst of a remarkable run of three number-one singles. On The T.A.M.I. Show, they performed two of the songs—”Where Did Our Love Go” and “Baby Love”—as well as two numbers from earlier in their career.
Among the rest of the acts Binder grabbed were British Invasion acts Gerry and the Pacemakers and Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas, Lesley Gore (who typified New York’s Brill Building sound), and Chuck Berry who offered a reach back to the very beginnings of rock ‘n’ roll. The icing on the cake was James Brown and His Famous Flames, and the Rolling Stones, who were making their first American tour.
Two days of rehearsal gave Binder and his crew the opportunity to work out camera angles and editing patterns, but when it came to actual filming, Binder had to work “live.” With only one machine recording video, Binder cut among his four cameras on the fly, with no possibility of retakes, and no outtakes, insert shots or other post-production tricks that directors rely on today. This seat-of-the-pants approach led to what Binder calls his favorite shot of his career: an extreme close-up of a vibrant, ecstatic Ross as she sings “Baby Love.”
It also led to some frightening creative decisions, especially with James Brown. “In his case, I had never heard the songs or seen him perform them. And he refused to rehearse. So when he came out, we just had to wing it. I took a huge risk during one number when I kept the camera tight on James's face as he headed offstage. I told the cameraman, ‘I don't care if we're shooting the edge of the stage, the lighting equipment, instrument cases, whatever—you cover the artist.’ ” We take Binder’s approach for granted today, but at the time industry executives warned Sargent that the film—with its long takes, extended close-ups, and occasional glimpses of lighting stands and cameras—was unreleasable.
Of the 12 acts in The T.A.M.I. Show, five were soul or R&B artists. At a time of racial unrest, the filmmakers' choices took real courage, but Binder’s eye for talent was prescient. About her records, Diana Ross wrote, “I didn't know who was buying the music. Even then, although unaware, we were already crossing color lines and breaking racial barriers.” And as James Brown told reporter Steven Rosen, the film was “a masterpiece and the beginning of my career in one way.” Already a legend in soul circles, Brown was having trouble breaking through to white audiences. “I’d been getting that kind of response for a long time, but white people didn't get a chance to see me because they didn't go to the venues I was playing at.”
Sargent and Binder collaborated on the order of the acts, and were responsible for placing The Rolling Stones after Brown on the bill. (Binder recalls, “Brown just smiled and said, 'No one follows me.'“). Brown was a seasoned professional who simply modified his club show for a new audience. The Stones had yet to define themselves for American viewers –they didn’t have a significant radio hit in the U.S. at the time—and were still working out their stage personalities. (They had debuted on “The Ed Sullivan Show” just a few days earlier.) One breathtaking shot from a vantage point behind the musicians captures the hysteria that greeted the group; another follows singer Mick Jagger on a runway out into the audience, later a staple of his act.
Following James Brown forced The Rolling Stones to ramp up their energy level. Guitarist Keith Richards half-jokingly called following Brown the worst decision of the group’s career. Critic Stephen Davis wrote later that the group received support from Marvin Gaye. “Just go out there and do your thing,” Gaye told them. They abandoned their announced set list to concentrate on songs like “It’s All Over Now” that hadn't been released yet. It's a sizzling performance by a band that would endure for decades.
Teens embraced the film, perhaps because it showed their music without condescension. (It was an immediate hit, outgrossing teen-oriented competition like Beach Party.) Lesley Gore was 18 at the time, the Supremes and Mick Jagger 20, and Binder only 23.
After the stunning success of The T.A.M.I. Show, another production house, American International Pictures produced a sequel, The Big T.N.T. Show, without Binder’s involvement. The original production, however, entered a legal limbo phase that took decades to resolve. Beach Boys manager Murry Wilson (father to the three Wilson brothers in the act) demanded that the footage of his band be removed after the initial theatrical run. When Dick Clark obtained television rights, he further edited the material. A condensed version was briefly available on home video, and bootleg versions showed up sporadically, but it wasn’t until 2010 that the entire film became available on a legal DVD release. Today, there is still a palpable thrill to The T.A.M.I. Show, a sense that these now legendary musicians and filmmakers were discovering themselves.
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Comments (16)
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The Beach Boys (and Brian Wilson in particular) have always cited the Four Freshmen as a primary influence. The harmonies are anything but dumbed down. To the contrary, they are complex and more jazz-oriented than any other pop music of the day. Obviously everyone is entitled to an opinion and to like or dislike what they choose, but you should also afford the same courtesy to others as well. The name calling is more a reflection of the writer than the music of the Beach Boys. You may want to do a bit of research on Mr. Wilson's life. Your insensitive remarks about his mental health don't paint a very flattering picture of you.
Posted by Scott Anderson on June 23,2010 | 11:22 PM
How can one dumb down AFTER 'Time After Time', 'Itsy Bitsy, Tiny Weenie, Yellow, Polka Dot Bikini', 'A Tisket, A Tasket', ' 3Little Fishies', 'Mairsy Doats', 'Turandot', or anything written by Wagner ?
Posted by Stuart Goldbarg on April 16,2010 | 04:49 PM
The Beach Boys own the show! No group has ever matched their harmonies and musical abilities...then...or now!
Posted by Tony on April 16,2010 | 02:58 PM
Wow, Mr. Metoikos sounds just like my dad did . . . in 1964. Listening to the Beatles my dad mocked the "she loves you yeah, yeah, yeah" lyric to no end. However, it wasn't just this song that makes Brian Wilson a genius, it is the body of work over his life that reveals a generation seeking something different. I look to Mr. Wilson, Bob Dylan, Chuck Berry and John Lennon as the older brothers who broke out of the strait-jacket of the conformist 50s culture, tore apart conventional thinking or compromise, and gave us the counter-culture, a member of which I still remain. What astounds me is that after 60 years rock and roll is still as fresh and as counter culture as ever. I can't think of another genre of music that did not grow old and stale as its first generation of listeners aged. There is something going on with it other than it is an industry to make people money. It defines more than one generation. Rock and roll renews and renovates itself every year, and it is people like Mr. Wilson that helped create it the first time simply using a few guitars and a set of drums to do so.
Posted by Robert Schoenberg on April 16,2010 | 01:50 PM
What a great remembrance of a very different time. Growing up with this music and these concerts as the soundtrack for our formative years was brought back to my mind by this article. Thanks. Put a smile on your face and follow the links to the T.A.M.I. Show and watch some of the highlights. The dancers in the background are really entertaining!
Posted by Jim Silversonic on April 16,2010 | 12:49 PM
It's unfortunate that "Metoikos" has such a dim view of American popular music. The Beach Boys barbershop harmonies and falsetto vocals are classic in nature, and bring back many happy memories of listening to the A.M. radio, waiting for the next hit. Brian Wilson was a talented arranger, and a good listening of "Pet Sounds" might go a long way towards explaining why he is considered a genius. My suspicion is that "Metoikos" is a classical music snob that thinks that music needs to be boring and beatless to have any validity, that it needs to be harmonically dense and structured exactly like every other piece of classical music that bores the heck out of most people.
As for James Brown, you just can't beat his performance for sheer energy. While I'll admit that there's nothing complicated musically about his work, it can't be duplicated by the classically-trained, by the book music theorists who think that music is what's written on paper. The sheet music is just a starting point. THe performance is what truly matters.
Posted by Art Ghecko on April 16,2010 | 12:39 PM
Hey Metoikos: You are missing the point;at that time period, this was cutting edge and not any type of dumbing down.Trust me, you had to be there.You have it wrong.
Posted by Mr. Fratcal on April 16,2010 | 12:05 PM
Rock 'n Roll? Excuse me! The Beach Boys rock? Nah, beautiful pop! The Supremes, Smokey and Brown rock? NOT! Just wonderful Motown, R&B, Soul.
The only one that can be classified as rock in the whole collection which can be called rock is the Stones. Sheesh!
Posted by SCPete on April 16,2010 | 11:59 AM
Re: Metoikos' Beach Boys rant...
The genius of Brian Wilson is in his arrangements, lyrics and the ability to pinpoint the pulse of a nation of teens in the mid-60's. Brian himself did all of this, unlike the current pop-music-burnout machine of producers, focus groups, and carefully designed personas meant to hold-on to an existing fan-base... The BB's drew their own audience.
Also, 5 albums simultaneously on the charts in the same year? Who could do that now? Not to mention writing hit songs for Jan & Dean (announcing Chuck Berry on that clip). It's no wonder that he burned-out, with millions of dollars at stake on every word of his songs. The record companies expected hit records from him, unlike most of today's "personality" artists who are handed lyrics and pre-arranged music, then heavily promoted until they become profitable.
Posted by Rickshaw on April 16,2010 | 10:52 AM
Really Metoikos...you're going to ridicule THE BEACH BOYS for dumbing down music? Sure you're entitled to your opinion, but those who really know music are laughing at your comments. And as for "tin ears" I can thank (and you can blame) Mick Jagger himself for doing everything he could to promote The Beach Boys and "I Get Around" in England...home to the Beatles (who were also Beach Boys fans) and a place where Brian Wilson is still revered to this day.
Posted by Scott on April 16,2010 | 08:56 AM
The Beach Boys happened to produce the first concept album, a breakthrough in the culture and the music industry, inspiring, and followed later by the Beatles, Rolling Stones, and dozens of other rock acts. Their layered harmonies have been copied by everyone from CSN to S&G, their use of synthesizers predated the Moody Blues and just about everyone else who made use of them in a later era.
Some of Brian Wilson's compositions are acknowledged to be among the best of the era, and stand among the most recorded songs ever.
If some people "can't figure it out", it appears that the problem lies with those people, not the originators of the music.
Posted by Rick Starr on April 16,2010 | 08:53 AM
To understand the beauty of music, we must recognize how it moves us. The Beach Boys moved a lot of people, and still do to this day. Music on the big screen and television are a HUGE part of many lives because of artists like them and visionary supporters who dared to present them to us.
Thanks for reminding me of the T. A. M. I. show and what a tremendous impact it had on my life.
Posted by Randy C. on April 15,2010 | 11:51 PM
I loved this music back in the day. Its boring now, and tedious. That they produced stuff that is today shunned for its simplicity, is absurd. The new bands are totally simplistic in lyrical content, and musical ability. But then I like some of today's music as well. The Exies come to mind, and Screaming Cheeta Wheelies. Porcupine tree...Nothing so complicated that it can't be duplicated by a local band on Friday night, which is what happened to THAT T.A.M.I. music back in the day....
Posted by Rex Stratton on April 15,2010 | 11:18 PM
I feel fortunate to have been young in the era that produced the greatest bands and best music ever. The Beach Boys were my favorite. Thank you for this story.
Posted by Frankie on April 5,2010 | 10:27 AM
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