Over 40 Years Later, Musician-Activist Victor Jara Remains Relevant as Ever
By Emma Silvers
FEBRUARY 14, 2017
Victor Jara might not be a household name outside his home country of Chile, but perhaps it should be: his story remains as relevant as it is poignant.
A singer-songwriter, theater director and working-class activist often called the Bob Dylan of South America, Jara became well-known in the late 1960s and early 70s for his songs and writings on inequality, labor and social justice. That focus that took on a whole new layer of tragic irony when he was kidnapped, tortured and killed by Chilean military officers working for newly installed dictator Pinochet during the U.S.-backed coup of 1973.
The Resurrection of Victor Jara, a 2015 documentary from director John Travers, explores the folk legends life, death and legacy through archival footage, interviews with musicians (Bono, Pete Seeger and Arlo Guthrie among them), and Jaras songs the artists own recordings as well as performances by the wide range of Chilean and Argentine musicians he influenced.
The film gets its West Coast debut this Saturday, Feb. 18, at Artists Television Access in San Francisco, as one of 11 films that comprise the Noise Pop festivals 2017 lineup. (Though its still primarily a music festival, Noise Pop has in recent years steadily expanded its film schedule; this years documentaries explore everything from the Burmese punk scene to the rise of modern festival culture to rare footage from the archives of folklorist Alan Lomax.)
More:
https://ww2.kqed.org/arts/2017/02/14/over-40-years-later-musician-activist-victor-jara-remains-relevant-as-ever/