Consider them education. Or entertainment. Music documentaries provide an opportunity to celebrate — or learn — about old music, the history of music or new music. Or just your favorite artist.
For the equivalent of a semesterlong course, Ken Burns offers two spectacular marathons — the 10-episode "Jazz" (2001) and the eight-part "Country Music" (2019). Both can be streamed by Twin Cities Public Television members through the end of May.
Here are some recommended music docs that can be found on YouTube, DVD/Blu-ray or streaming services like Netflix.
"Don't Look Back" (1967) — No film captures the whirlwind of early pop stardom better than cinema verité pioneer D.A. Pennebaker's chronicle of Bob Dylan's 1965 electric tour of England. He'd split up with Joan Baez, switched from folk to rock and turned the Beatles onto pot. The must-see film also features Dylan flipping cue cards for what became the "music video" of "Subterranean Homesick Blues."
"The Decline of Western Civilization" (1981) — Punk rockers were rarely seen on film until Penelope Spheeris' landmark portrayal of the L.A. punk scene, featuring frantic performances by X, Black Flag and others. To add cinematic drama, she interviewed the musicians under one light bulb as they carped about suburban strip malls and their own urban squalor.
"This Is Spinal Tap" (1984) — Rob Reiner's monumental mockumentary may be fiction, but it captures the true essence — and excesses and inanities — of a big-time touring band. Christopher Guest, Michael McKean and Harry Shearer star as a popular British heavy-metal band whose drummers keep dying in bizarre ways.
"Gospel According to Al Green" (1984) — After dogged pursuit, Robert Mugge, who has made music docs on the likes of Gil Scott-Heron and Sonny Rollins, finally landed an interview with the soul star turned preacher and filmed the seventh anniversary of his church in Memphis. The complexities, love and happiness of Al Green are here in abundance.
"Truth or Dare" (1991) — If you think Madonna was the boldest, most brilliant superstar of the MTV Age, you will might find this to be a remarkably insightful backstage glimpse of a rock-concert tour.