Category Archives: Music History

Murder In The Front Row: Bay Area Thrash Metal Documentary Premiere Q & A

Thrash metal Documentary Movie Screening Tickets are now onsale for a Murder In The Front Row Bay Area

Buy Tix At The Link Here Thursday, September 26th 2019 8:45 p.m. – 11:15 p.m. screening at Jack London Sq’s Regal Theater in Oakland

The 18th Annual SF Indie Documentary Film Festival screened it in May and I got a chance to catch the sold out premiere of  “Murder In The Front Row: The Bay Area Thrash Metal Story”. The film is a social study of a group of young people defying the odds and building something essential for themselves. Featuring interviews with Metallica, Megadeth, Slayer, Anthrax, Exodus, Testament, Death Angel, Possessed and many more!

Here’s some snippets from the rowdy crowd that night checking out the post screening chat with the filmmakers at the Murder in the Front Row: The Bay Area Thrash Metal Story screening event put together by San Francisco IndieFest. I was lucky enough to score tix early to even get in to to see this premiere of Murder In The Front Row as the line was stretching around the block when I arrived. You’ll hear some of the audience’s overwhelming roars of excitement as the first few frames hit the screen, as well as the Q & A afterwards with the director Adam Dubin, lifelong thrash metal fan and narrator Brian Posehn and one of the subjects of the film, the meat handed maestro Tom Hunting of Exodus .

The Gits – Absynthe

The Gits – Absynthe

Beloved and feisty Seattle band whose path to punk rock glory was cut tragically short…

Here they are performing in a rare clip of a show I shot at the Covered Wagon Saloon in San Francisco in February 1993.

Buffy Sainte Marie vs Jane Pauley

A 1978 interview featuring Buffy St Marie (born Beverly Jean Santamaria into an Italo-American family in Massachusetts), who has long portrayed herself as a native american musician and activist, seen here performing with an indigenous tribal mouthbow on a network program with the daytime TV talk show hostess & newscaster Jane Pauley

YouTube video player

Buffy Sainte-Marie, introduced many Americans to the plight of the Native American Indians with the song, “Now that the Buffalo’s Gone”. Ever since her folk songs found an audience from her start in the Greenwich Village folk scene, Buffy Sainte-Marie has been publicizing the cause of Native People’s cultural recognition, and for autonomy and jurisdiction over their own Indian reservations. Buffy’s 60 year career as a performer became intertwined with the cause of indigenous people, as she wore Native American garb and beadwork, even becoming a regular on the TV show “Sesame Street” where she taught children about Indian customs songs and language, especially her supposedly native Cree.

While rumors long existed, with newspaper accounts dating back to 1964 calling into question her truthfulness, her passionate performances were rarely called into question. It wasn’t until decades later her ruse was definitively exposed by a detailed 2023 Canadian Broadcasting investigation of her origin story, with unearthed birth certificate, home movies, and accounts of family members’, including her niece, that exposed the media myth that Buffy St Marie was born on a reservation in Saskatchewan. Now 82, a few years after she was honored on a Canadian Postage Stamp, and through a PBS American Masters doc film called “Carry It On” that has since won an International Emmy, the Stoneham Massachusetts born singer/activist, and what some call one of “Pretendians” (pretend Indians), has retired from the public eye.

YouTube video player