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Disco: Soundtrack of a Revolution is a call to get down and party. But it’s also a docuseries that foregrounds the music’s true history.
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Broomfield is perhaps best known for his investigative work surrounding the early deaths of Kurt Cobain, Tupac Shakur, and the Notorious B.I.G.
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Director Nick Broomfield’s affection for the subject matter is obvious.
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"Nothing in life is ever as simple as we want it to be.”
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“I play the drums for Keith and Mick. I don’t play them for me.”
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In Stones-lore, "Woody" will always be "the new guy".
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This series finds new ways to tell stories you’ve heard before.
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Mick, Keef and the rest of the Stones perform with the zeal of death row inmates who just made parole.
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How streaming services are changing the concert sphere.
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Emma Stone and Emma Thompson anchor this halfway-decent Disney rehash.
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Iain Cooke defends his controversial choice to diss prog rock, too.
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Equally split between big hits and deep cuts, the song selection will satisfy both casual and hardcore fans.
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This doc is a music nerd's delight, and features Keith Richards, Mick Jagger, Aretha Franklin and more legendary musicians.
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Ratones Paranoicos: The Band That Rocked Argentina tells the universal story of the birth, life, death, and resurrection of a rock 'n' roll band.
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Every Night's A Saturday Night is rough around the edges, but it hardly matters.
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Concerts aren't happening this summer, unfortunately, but these films will give you some of that electricity.
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This documentary offers an intimate first person view from inside one of rock's most legendary bands.
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When The Rolling Stones finally take the stage they look meek and impotent, surrounded by bikers twice their size and throngs of traumatized fans.
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Between concert films and docs, there are over 20 different long form features about The Rolling Stones. Olé, Olé, Olé ranks among the best.
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Can't you hear me knocking?