‘Dread Beat An Blood’ Documentary About Dub Poet Linton Kwesi Johnson Showing At NY’s Film Forum Starting July 24
Photos: YouTube Screenshots Film Forum is pleased to present the long-overdue U.S. theatrical premiere of the new restoration of Franco Rosso’s DREAD BEAT AN BLOOD in a new 4K restoration, screening with the U.S. theatrical premiere of Roger Thomas’ LINTON KWESI JOHNSON IN CONCERT, on Friday, July 24. “Brothers an sisters rocking / A dread beat pulsing fire…” opens Dread Beat an Blood, the 1975 poem – and album – by the Jamaican-born, British-based dub reggae artist and activist, Linton Kwesi Johnson. He created the genre of dub poetry – militant, passionate verse detailing the struggle for Black liberation in Britain, set to heavy rhythms. The 1979 documentary portrait, DREAD BEAT AN BLOOD, directed by Franco Rosso (BABYLON), captures Johnson in the recording studio, performing live poetry, and protesting the wrongful imprisonment of Black Briton George Lindo. Beautifully restored by the British Film Institute, this is its U.S. theatrical premiere. “[A] gem…a portrait of the artist as principled activist.” – Sasha Frere-Jones, 4Columns PLUS the rarely-shown LINTON KWESI JOHNSON IN CONCERT, a 1985 performance featuring Johnson with the Dennis Bovell Dub Band (the backing group on his seminal 1984 album, Making History), filmed for Channel 4 in the UK. “Linton Kwesi Johnson’s impact on the cultural landscape over the last half-century has been colossal and multi-generational.” – The Guardian “A revolutionary poet for our times.” – Jacobin “If any young artists need to know about longevity and integrity, Linton Kwesi Johnson is the one to look to… He knew his path and he walked it. His words are still relevant and that reggae bass is still vibrating.” – Steve McQueen “An invaluable document of Brixton, an area that was already at the front lines of the anti-racist struggle, the streets in which people would soon rise up in rebellion. That sense of latent frustration simmers in every frame. It is Johnson himself who articulates that frustration, honing that anger into art via his poetry.” – Kevin McCaighy, The Quietus “A documentary of extraordinary pulse, insight and value.” – Robert Shelton, The Listener “A fascinating document of LKJ in his time and place, touring with the sound systems, strolling through the market and visiting Tulse Hill schools, vividly capturing black British culture in a country on the cusp of Thatcherism, just a few months before the Brixton uprising.” – Stephen Troussé, Uncut “Fantastic… An amazing snapshot of the time of the pre-Brixton riots… This is so relevant a movie. That’s what makes it so good.” – Gilles Peterson, BBC DREAD BEAT AN BLOOD (1979, 46 min.) Directed and Produced by Franco Rosso. Music: “Poet and the Roots” (Linton Kwesi Johnson, Floydie Lawson, Vivian Weathers, Jah Bunny, Winston “Crab” Curnife). Music Producer & Engineer: Dennis Bovell. Camera: Ivan Strasburg, Pascoe Macfarlane. Editor: David Hope. Assistant Editor: Brenda Simson. Sound: Mike McDufe, Edward Tise, Steve Shaw. With Linton Kwesi Johnson, Dennis Bovell, Vivian Weathers, Winston “Crab” Curnife. UK. Seventy-Seven. LINTON KWESI JOHNSON IN CONCERT (1985, 26 min.) Directed by Roger Thomas. UK. Seventy-Seven.
Photos: YouTube Screenshots
Film Forum is pleased to present the long-overdue U.S. theatrical premiere of the new restoration of Franco Rosso’s DREAD BEAT AN BLOOD in a new 4K restoration, screening with the U.S. theatrical premiere of Roger Thomas’ LINTON KWESI JOHNSON IN CONCERT, on Friday, July 24.

“Brothers an sisters rocking / A dread beat pulsing fire…” opens Dread Beat an Blood, the 1975 poem – and album – by the Jamaican-born, British-based dub reggae artist and activist, Linton Kwesi Johnson. He created the genre of dub poetry – militant, passionate verse detailing the struggle for Black liberation in Britain, set to heavy rhythms. The 1979 documentary portrait, DREAD BEAT AN BLOOD, directed by Franco Rosso (BABYLON), captures Johnson in the recording studio, performing live poetry, and protesting the wrongful imprisonment of Black Briton George Lindo. Beautifully restored by the British Film Institute, this is its U.S. theatrical premiere. “[A] gem…a portrait of the artist as principled activist.” – Sasha Frere-Jones, 4Columns
PLUS the rarely-shown LINTON KWESI JOHNSON IN CONCERT, a 1985 performance featuring Johnson with the Dennis Bovell Dub Band (the backing group on his seminal 1984 album, Making History), filmed for Channel 4 in the UK.
“Linton Kwesi Johnson’s impact on the cultural landscape over the last half-century has been colossal and multi-generational.” – The Guardian
“A revolutionary poet for our times.” – Jacobin
“If any young artists need to know about longevity and integrity, Linton Kwesi Johnson is the one to look to… He knew his path and he walked it. His words are still relevant and that reggae bass is still vibrating.” – Steve McQueen
“An invaluable document of Brixton, an area that was already at the front lines of the anti-racist struggle, the streets in which people would soon rise up in rebellion. That sense of latent frustration simmers in every frame. It is Johnson himself who articulates that frustration, honing that anger into art via his poetry.” – Kevin McCaighy, The Quietus
“A documentary of extraordinary pulse, insight and value.” – Robert Shelton, The Listener
“A fascinating document of LKJ in his time and place, touring with the sound systems, strolling through the market and visiting Tulse Hill schools, vividly capturing black British culture in a country on the cusp of Thatcherism, just a few months before the Brixton uprising.” – Stephen Troussé, Uncut
“Fantastic… An amazing snapshot of the time of the pre-Brixton riots… This is so relevant a movie. That’s what makes it so good.” – Gilles Peterson, BBC
DREAD BEAT AN BLOOD (1979, 46 min.) Directed and Produced by Franco Rosso. Music: “Poet and the Roots” (Linton Kwesi Johnson, Floydie Lawson, Vivian Weathers, Jah Bunny, Winston “Crab” Curnife). Music Producer & Engineer: Dennis Bovell. Camera: Ivan Strasburg, Pascoe Macfarlane. Editor: David Hope. Assistant Editor: Brenda Simson. Sound: Mike McDufe, Edward Tise, Steve Shaw. With Linton Kwesi Johnson, Dennis Bovell, Vivian Weathers, Winston “Crab” Curnife. UK. Seventy-Seven.
LINTON KWESI JOHNSON IN CONCERT (1985, 26 min.) Directed by Roger Thomas. UK. Seventy-Seven.
