If you don't believe there's educational value in Zappa and Zeppelin, Rock School (DVD) will set you right. Some parents may be horrified by Paul Green, a one-time aspiring rock star and founder of the Rock School in Philadelphia (and later, in cities all over the U.S.), where kids from eight to 18 learn such valuable skills as thrashing guitar, pounding drums, and how to perform like a "Golden God" รก la Led Zeppelin's Robert Plant. Green embraces old school rock (no hip-hop or Britney wanna-bes here, thank you), and while some may take issue with his belligerent, berating and foul-mouthed treatment of his young students (some musically gifted, others definitely not), it's obvious that Green is on to something, giving aspiring rockers an outlet for educational enthusiasm they might not muster for traditional classroom subjects. Using a digital video camera to gain intimate access to Green and the future rockers of America, filmmaker Don Argott has crafted a funny, alarming, and altogether fascinating documentary that has a lot to say about our national obsession with fame, the curious benefits of Green's peculiar style of teaching, and the undeniable value of encouraging young people to embrace their dreams. For those about to rock…we salute you! (from amazon.com)
This was hilarious. A must see if you teach music. Especially the part where the guitar teacher keeps asking a kid to play a riff, then sing it, then at least clap it.... and the kid gets it wrong over and over and says "can we just play it now?" The performance at "Zappanalia" is truly amazing. The good, the bad, the loud, the messy.
Friday, June 22, 2007
ROCK SCHOOL!
Posted by
Kathleen
at
9:05 PM
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment