Directed by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman
Where & When: Arclight Cinemas, Hollywood, CA. September 22, 2019 12:30 PM
At one point in the engaging documentary, "Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice", Bonnie Raitt describes the singer as the "Beyoncé of her day". And that would be an accurate assessment of this versatile song stylist. Linda Ronstadt ruled the pop charts throughout the 1970's which helped make her become one of the biggest female recording artists of all time. But while she was at the top of her career, Ronstadt grew tired of the grind of the rock & roll lifestyle and needed to challenge herself creatively. She ventured out to record albums that explored theatrical comic opera, the Great American Songbook, classic country, jazz standards, Mexican Mariachi and Tropical Latin music. Her record label thought for sure that Ronstadt would ruin her career by going so far outside of conventional expectations of a pop singer. Yet thankfully they didn't stop her either. And these records became critical and commercial successes, helping to introduce Ronstadt to a wide new audience.
Ronstadt was born in Tucson, Arizona in 1946 and raised on a large ranch with her parents and three siblings. As the family was fairly isolated, the children had to find their own entertainment and that would be with music. Ronstadt was exposed to a variety of different genres of music through records and the radio while the entire family would harmonize together in song. This would help later in her career influence how she wanted her music to sound and to insist on firm creative control to make sure that would happen.
Ronstadt began singing professionally with her older brother, Peter and sister, Suzy as teens around the Tucson area. The three Ronstadts eventually joined musician Bobby Kimmel's folk-rock outfit, The New Union Ramblers and together enjoyed some local success. But Peter left to become a police officer, Suzy went off to get married and Kimmel headed to Los Angeles which left Ronstadt on her own with no idea of what she wanted to do with her life.
Kimmel knew Ronstadt would do well in LA, luring the eighteen year old out to the West Coast in 1964. They formed a group called the Stone Poneys, signed with Capitol Records and had a top ten pop hit with "Different Drum" (written by Monkees member, Mike Nesmith) by 1967. The band broke-up not long after this success but the label was more interested in their female vocalist anyway.
And Ronstadt became an incredibly popular artist and enjoyed a string of hit singles (with most being covers of some of her favorite songs) including "You're No Good", "Blue Bayou", "When Will I Be Loved", "Heat Wave", "Love is a Rose", "Ooh Baby, Baby" and "It's So Easy". But being viewed as a "chick singer" was challenging for her as there were expectations to be sexy and tough which Ronstadt was not comfortable doing. Since she was one of the few women performing in rock music, Ronstadt had to occasionally endure sexist behavior and received some resistance from her all-male band members from her calling the shots. But she never let any of this interfere with her ability to do what she loved.
Ms Ronstadt had absolutely no interest in participating in a film about her life but the filmmakers, Epstein and Friedman were persistent, frequently sending her warm and thoughtful letters. The now retired seventy-three year old performer eventually relented, in part due to their 1984 Academy-Award winning documentary on Harvey Milk which Ronstadt admired and made her feel like she would be in good hands. Yet she still had a couple of ground rules; Ronstadt didn't want to have an on-camera interview nor did she want the film to dwell on her Parkinson's disease which she has been dealing with since around 2009.
"The Sound of My Voice" covers a vast majority of Ronstadt's lengthy life and career but the film moves briskly. The highlight of this documentary, without a doubt, are the several thrilling live performances from Ronstadt in her prime which perfectly capture her skill and grace as a vocalist. Some of Ronstadt's musical contemporaries appear in the film to sing her praises which include Jackson Browne, Ry Cooder, J.D. Souther (which she had a brief relationship with), Aaron Neville and Don Henley who was at one time a part of a group of Ronstadt's backing musicians that would eventually become The Eagles.
Ronstadt never felt any competition with the other talented female performers who were around at the time and went out of her way to befriend them. Raitt and Karla Bonoff would become her life-long friends while she collaborated with Emmylou Harris and Dolly Parton on two highly successful country albums. The only criticism you will find about Ronstadt in the film is from the singer herself. She's notoriously self-deprecating, continuously going on about how she's not a great singer and that many of her recordings are not very good.
While she found her great fame during the era of the singer/songwriter, Ronstadt did not write her own material. "The Sound of My Voice" brings to focus her unique ability to reinterpret beloved, familiar tunes while reshaping them to feel like fresh new songs. Near the end of the film, we are treated with Ronstadt singing along with her brother and nephew to a traditional Mexican folk ballad. While the disease has robbed her of the powerful voice she once had, Ronstadt gives her all, looking elated and stating that there was no way she wouldn't join her family in song.
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