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New Film: Digging for Weldon Irvine






New Film: Digging for Weldon Irvine




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March 24, 208

To: Listings/Critics/Features
From: Jazz Promo Services
www.jazzpromoservices.com

New Film:
Digging for Weldon Irvine
directed by Victorious De Costa


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A feature length documentary being produced about the legendary Weldon J. Irvine, Jr. Digging for Weldon Irvine is directed by Victorious De Costa and Executive Produced by Joe 'G-Clef' Cavaseno. the film, which began development in 2015, is currently in post production and is reaching out to the Jazz ocmmunity for assistance with its completion. 

The film promises to be choc-full of  Weldon's  collaborators, mentees, family and close friends. Lenny White, Billy Cobham, Samuel Waymon and Gene Perla to name a few.

All donations are eligible for tax-deduction through the film's fiscal sponsor's From The Heart Productions   501(c)3 status.  Click HERE to Donate

Please follow and spread the word on social media 

Synopsis

What happens to a dream deferred? 
 
Langston Hughes’ cautionary prose has been the stimulus for some of the most important artistic offerings of the 20th century. Chiefly among them, the civil rights anthem “Young, Gifted, and Black”, written by prolific musician-composer-playwright Weldon Irvine. In the wake of his untimely death, a focused, contemporary reflection upon his life reveals the astounding irony that Weldon Irvine would come to be one of the most quintessential examples of Hughes’s examination. Digging for Weldon Irvine explores the enduring legacy of a man deeply vital to the culture of black freedom of expression, yet is somehow overlooked within that very lexicon. 
 
Award-winning director Victorious DeCosta (Dirty Hearts, Love Seat) brings a befitting and timely analysis to the life and legacy of Weldon Irvine, whose work drew appreciation from the likes of Freddie Hubbard and Nina Simone to Mos Def and Q-Tip. His bountiful and socio-culturally evocative work in music and theater was central to the Black Arts Movement of the 1970s; integral to the evolution of hip hop, from its inception through its golden era of consciousness and heavy jazz-laden sampling; and whose dedicated mentorship sparked a movement in his long-time residence of St. Albans, Queens, helping develop some of the most well-known figures in jazz today. 
 
Through previously unreleased audio and music from Irvine, and exclusive interviews with those closely associated with the tortured artist professionally and personally, DeCosta helps us understand the journey of an artist of moderate success yet monumental influence. Equally as important, how those two realities coexisted, and why? Irvine, who wrote over 500 songs and over 50 plays, relentlessly strived to reinvent himself within an industry and a world that didn’t always reciprocate, understand, or appreciate his voice. A hovering backdrop of generational burdens, toxic vices, and unapologetic blackness paint the complexities that sing an all-too-familiar refrain of the native son’s inability to fully escape the web of American fate. Yet, the resilience of Weldon Irvine’s creative contribution remains a lovely, precious dream.
 

 

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