thu 19/12/2024

Rebel Dread review - generous documentary portrait of punk-reggae legend Don Letts | reviews, news & interviews

Rebel Dread review - generous documentary portrait of punk-reggae legend Don Letts

Rebel Dread review - generous documentary portrait of punk-reggae legend Don Letts

Familiar talking heads and archive footage deployed to cover an intriguing career in music

Dread meets punk: film-maker Don Letts takes the helm

Don Letts, the film director, musician and DJ responsible for so many of the iconic images of punk and reggae artists, executive produced this documentary portrait.

The result is a warm and generous chronicle that occasionally veers on the hagiographic side. But Letts has led such a dynamic life that the lack of any critical voices is forgivable, especially when there’s a wealth of great archive (much of it from Letts’ own collection) and good anecdotes from the likes of Mick Jones, John Lydon and Daddy G.

Born in Brixton to parents who had come over from Jamaica in the mid ‘50s to work on the buses and the garment trade, Letts recalls growing up unaware of racism until Enoch Powell’s infamous ‘rivers of blood’ speech in ’68. But rather than dwell on persecution, Letts focuses on the simultaneous American civil rights movement – cue James Brown performing ‘Say It Loud, I’m Black and I’m Proud’. It’s fascinating too to learn that his first gig was going to see The Who and that he was a huge fan of the Beatles. Style was always crucial and led to Letts being something of a ladies' man with a complicated family life.

Teenage Don Letts sported aviator shades and an Afro. His older brother Desmond Coy remembers a David Bowie phase when he wore earrings and eye shadow too. Working in a clothes shop on the King’s Road led Letts to fall under the influence of Malcolm McLaren and Vivienne Westwood. Invited to DJ at the Roxy in Covent Garden resulted in Letts fusing London’s burgeoning punk scene with what he describes as his Rasta brethren. After the club closed, musicians including the Sex Pistols, the Clash and Billy Idol would head back to Letts’ place in Forest Hill to carry on partying. Buying a Super-8 camera to shoot punk concerts set him on the path to becoming a prolific director with over 400 music videos to his name as well as full-length documentaries.

A stint managing the all-girl punk band The Slits (Letts above with the late Ari Up), led to touring with The Clash on the White Riot tour. A long film collaboration with the band survived their split in 1986 and saw Letts join Mick Jones's Big Audio Dynamite as a musician. He makes no pretence of being a great vocalist or instrumentalist but definitely deserves credit for BAD’s innovative use of sampling and its fusion of musical genres. 

There’s a lot of pleasure in hearing from veterans of the punk and Black British music scene, and also wallowing in Letts’ fabulous archive. Given that director William E Badgley has already made a documentary about The Slits (Here to be Heard), it’s a shame there isn’t more from the former band members, but maybe old disputes lie behind the on-screen absences. Music journalist Chris Salewicz is insightful throughout although it's disappointing that there’s only a tantalisingly brief glimpse of Vivien Goldman, the journalist turned musician and later academic authority on punk history. Rebel Dread is at its most interesting when Letts looks back on his first time staying in Jamaica in ’78. The reality of poverty in the townships  clashed with the image he’d had from romanticised gangster films, particularly The Harder They Come. Letts recalls all the Jamaican bands whose records he’d treasured back in London turning up at their luxury hotel in the hope of getting a deal out of Richard Branson, observing wryly that the real pioneers in music never collect.  

Letts regrets not being able to connect with his Jamaican grandparents and a later stint filming in Namibia made him feel even more alien. But he doesn’t dwell too much on the dilemmas of straddling cultures, taking pride in having made the first black music video (Musical Youth’s 'Pass the Duchy') to get played on MTV. The end of Rebel Dread plays a little too much like an obituary tribute to a man who is still very much alive, but this is an otherwise entertaining 80-minute gallop through an extraordinary life. 

'Rebel Dread' is at its most interesting when Letts looks back on his first time staying in Jamaica

rating

Editor Rating: 
4
Average: 4 (1 vote)

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