I think Mary Wilson and The Temptations Review worked wonderful in Motown: The Early Years. The great supporting cast includes Mary Wilson, The Temptations Review, Joe Billingslea's Contours, Bobby Rogers, Levi Stubbs.
I left some information, immages, and video previews of Motown: The Early Years below.
Summary of Motown: The Early Years:
Are You Ready For A Brand-New Beat?
The gritty urban environment, the burgeoning pride and drive of black Americans, and blues, soul and gospel influences combined to form the music coming out of Detroit in the early 1960s. The sounds of early Motown were hopeful and soulful and, above all, made you want to dance.
Motown: The Early Years -- a unique combination of vintage clips of the original legends and Featuring live performances of the current touring groups -- brings memories to life and will have you belting out the songs and dancing along. This music lives forever.
Performances: Dancing In The Street - Martha Reeves (Love Is Like A) Heat Wave - Martha Reeves Jimmy Mack - Martha Reeves Nowhere To Run - Martha Reeves Needle In A Hay Stack - The Velvelettes Do You Love Me - Joe Billingslea's Contours Just A Little Misunderstanding - Joe Billingslea's Contours Get Ready - The Temptations Review featuring Dennis Edwards Ain't Too Proud To Beg - The Temptations Review featuring Dennis Edwards The Way You Do The Things You Do - The Temptations Review featuring Dennis Edwards My Girl - The Temptations Review featuring Dennis Edwards Baby I Need Your Loving - Four Tops Bernadette - Four Tops It's The Same Old Song - Four Tops I Can't Help Myself - Four Tops
A Bloody Show: John Wesley Harding & Friends Live at Bumbershoot 2005 - Experience The Magic Of Movies
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A Bloody Show: John Wesley Harding & Friends Live at Bumbershoot 2005 was an incredible movie! Both John Wesley Harding and Kelly Hogan were amazing! The great cast includes John Wesley Harding, Kelly Hogan, Brian Lohmann, Robyn Hitchcock, Scott McCaughey.
If you love watching John Wesley Harding or Kelly Hogan, you are deffinetly going to want to watch A Bloody Show: John Wesley Harding & Friends Live at Bumbershoot 2005.
Two disparate media make felicitous bedfellows in A Bloody Show, a performance by singer-songwriter John Wesley Harding and various collaborators: Misfortune, his critically-acclaimed 2005 novel (written under his real name, Wesley Stace; Stace's nom de musique, was taken from a recording of that name by Bob Dylan, who himself copped it from 19th Century American gunfighter John Wesley Hardin); and Songs of Misfortune, a selection of tunes mentioned in the book and recorded that same year by Harding and his a cappella quartet, the Love Hall Tryst. This straightforward, simply-staged Seattle gig, organized in barely a week and included in that city's annual Bumbershoot festival, features readings from the book, principally by Harding and fellow Brit muso Robyn Hitchcock, interspersed with songs from the album performed by the Tryst and a Harding-led rock band known as the Minstrel in the Galleries, with occasional accompaniment by a string quartet. The music comes mostly from traditional British sources, and thus is filled with tales of murder, adultery, and other eternal sins, a fact that the author-musician acknowledges with droll understatement ("We're going to be entering the infanticide portion of the set fairly shortly," he wryly warns the family crowd). Those songs and Leonard Cohen's "Joan of Arc" are masterfully rendered by the singers, bolstered by the use of acoustic guitars, mandolin, and hurdy-gurdy; the rock band, meanwhile, bears a passing resemblance to folk-rock pioneers Fairport Convention even while falling well short of that lofty standard. It's quite an undertaking; while Harding submits that "We didn't screw up too bad," A Bloody Show is actually a rousing success. An extra CD's worth of Harding's demos for the Misfortune material is included with the first 5000 copies. --Sam Graham