Director: Jeffrey Levy-Hinte
Operator: Paul Goldsmith, Kevin Keating, Albert Maysles and Roderick Young
Producer: Jeffrey Levy-Hinte
Roles: James Brown, Bill Withers, BB King, the
Spinners, Miriam Makeba, Celia Cruz and the
Fania All-Stars, the Crusaders, Muhammad Ali,
Don King, Stewart Levine, Hugh Masakela,
George Plimpton, Stokely Carmichael.
Zaire ‘74 was the brainchild of South African musician Hugh
Masekela and American record producer Stewart Levine,
a three-day music festival that took place in Kinshasa in
1974. The event assembled America's biggest rhythm and
blues talents – including James Brown and the Mighty JBs, Bill
Withers, B.B. King, and the Spinners – along with top African
acts such as Miriam Makeba and Afrisa. The festival was held
in conjunction with the boxing match between Muhammad
Ali and George Foreman known as the “Rumble in the
Jungle.” Most of the American performers, emboldened
by the civil rights movement, were visiting Africa for the
first time, exploring their roots and somewhat naive beliefs
about the dictator Mobutu Sese Seko. The promoters hired
a team of esteemed documentary cameramen to film
everything, including street life in Kinshasa and behind-thescenes
footage of the show being assembled. The crew
masterfully recorded classic numbers such as Makeba's “The
Click Song,” King's “The Thrill Is Gone,” and of course, Brown's
“Soul Power.” And then the footage sat unedited for over
thirty years.
Thom Powers