Documentary Releases: Lead Belly: The Man Who Invented Rock & Roll (2021) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Wienerworld Presentation

MVD Entertainment has been picking up and rereleasing preexisting documentaries or concert films and publishing them in new disc editions.  Recently one of them was The Fabulous Thunderbirds – Live in Houston originally made in 2006 but remastered for blu-ray disc in 2025 and the latest one couldn’t have had more impeccable timing for the street date if it tried: Curt Hahn’s 2021 documentary Lead Belly: Life, Legend, Legacy or as it was originally titled and represented here Lead Belly: The Man Who Invented Rock & Roll.  While the story of American blues singer and multi-talented musician Huddie William Ledbetter nicknamed Lead Belly is familiar to many, defining the standards for what would become folk music, blues music and eventually rock music, this documentary film is an intimate unbiased look at the artist that all but fully introduces him to newcomers.  Newly released on DVD for the first time by indie releasing label Wienerworld Presentation, Lead Belly: The Man Who Invented Rock & Roll is an indelible companion piece to the hottest new Hollywood film Sinners which has its claws dug deep into the heart of blues music.

 
Filmed on digital video and comprised of retrospective interviews with B.B. King, Joan Baez, Pete Seeger, Harry Belafonte and more, the documentary running around eighty minutes dives deep into the life story and the work of Lead Belly.  From his rise from the ashes of a Harrison County chain gang before singing his way out of two prison sentences to the eventual formation of a musical career and induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, the story of Lead Belly is one fraught with tragedy.  Nevertheless, despite the deaths experienced and sometimes caused by the performer, Lead Belly amassed a reputation as a ‘King of the Twelve-String Guitar’ as well as the accordion which he is often seen in photographs of playing both instruments.  The documentary itself intersperses between archival recordings and footage of Lead Belly as well as newly filmed interviews building up a comprehensive portrait of the man’s overarching influences on modern music.

 
As aforementioned, the doc is hitting DVD not only years after the film’s original inception but right as the popularity of blues in modern cinema is at an all-time high with the bluesiest action film to hit theaters since The Blues Brothers or Kansas City.  Though the technical merits of the documentary aren’t wonderful with blurry aliasing footage of musicians and historians, the story being conveyed here is indelible and points to a whole century of musical influences all stemming from one man’s work.  All in all, an enriching viewing experience that filled in many historical musical gaps for me and it felt absolutely right to watch this immediately after taking a deep dive down Ryan Coogler’s masterpiece.  Those who are already familiar with the story of Lead Belly are also inclined to give this their time as it has the capacity to convert the uninitiated into fans and might teach those who know him a thing or two they didn’t think of before.  This one’s a keeper!

--Andrew Kotwicki