Anyone Can Play
Guitar
Dir: Jon Spira
2011
****
Anyone Can Play Guitar is a fascinating little
music documentary by Jon Spira (Elstree 1976) about the Oxford Indie
scene of the late 80s to late 90s. Not my town but definitely my
music, I remember the buzz well but never quite made it to Oxford's infamous
venues. It is amazing to see how far one seed can grow, all thanks to the
influence of bands like Talulah Gosh, venues such as the Jericho and
the success of groups like Radiohead. Spira recorded over 300 hours of
interviews with pretty much everyone who was there and involved. I can't
imagine what it would be like to try and edit that down to just 90 minutes but
the end result is just great. There are several stories going on through the
run time, it is a history lesson but also a very personal journey for many of
the people involved and the interviewees really do open up. The local label
created by the combination of venues, managers and fanzine
are heralded as music heroes by many and scorned upon by some for
their hold on things and lack of direction. It's a beautifully balanced piece.
The rise of bands such as Supergrass, Ride and Radiohead is covered as you'd
expect but we also see what happened to much hyped bands such as Swervedriver,
Dustball, Five Thirty and the unluckiest band in the world, The Candy Skins.
The trials and tribulations of The Candy Skins could have been
covered in their own film, a great band who suffered greatly thanks to nothing
more than bad timing, again and again. Spira passion for these bands, the
movement and his local history is clear and the film is easy to
be enveloped by, indeed I bought five albums from these bands the moment
the film ended, I just wish I'd heard of them back in the day but thanks to
great documentary makers like Spira I haven't quite missed out.
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