Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice is a 2019 documentary film about American singer Linda Ronstadt. It was directed by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman.[3] It features interviews with many of Ronstadt's friends and fellow artists.
Greenwich Entertainment, 1091 and CNN Films released Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice in theaters in September 2019.[3] It was released on Digital HD from Amazon Video and iTunes on December 3, 2019, and on DVD and Blu-ray on December 10, 2019.[4] Its broadcast premiere was on the CNN network on January 1, 2020.
Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice covers Ronstadt's life and career from childhood to the present day. Narrated by the singer (who otherwise appears on camera only briefly in present-day footage), she describes how she grew up in Tucson, Arizona, singing Mexican canciones with her family; her folk-rock days with her first professional group, the Stone Poneys, in the late 1960s; living in Santa Monica, California; and her early days performing at the popular West Hollywood night club, the Troubadour.
Other topics covered by the film include her rise as the "queen of country rock" in the 1970s; her advocacy for women in the male-dominated music industry; her high-profile romance with California Governor Jerry Brown; and her unexpected move away from country-rock into diverse areas such as opera, the Great American Songbook, and several albums devoted to the music of her Mexican heritage.
The documentary reaches to the present day and how the onset of what was initially thought to be Parkinson's disease left her unable to sing and forced her into early retirement in 2009.
The film is illustrated with concert footage from throughout Ronstadt's career, and interviews with many of her collaborators, friends, and family members.
Cast
The following musicians or others involved in Ronstadt's life and career are named and seen onscreen in an interview setting, usually for small amounts of screen time.
On the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 89% based on 94 reviews. The site's critical consensus reads, "Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice offers an engaging overview of its subject's career that should entertain fans and the uninitiated alike."[6]Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 77 out of 100, indicating "Generally favorable reviews".[7]
Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter wrote that the film "will make you fall in love with [Linda] all over again" and that it "will delight the singer's old fans and likely make her many new ones as well".[8] Pete Hammond of Deadline wrote that it "expertly captures why Ronstadt was such a unique performer — a voice that could lend itself to any form of music she tried" and that the "performance footage that will knock your socks off and likely sell millions more albums from her vast catalog".[9]Owen Gleiberman of Variety wrote, "Ronstadt's voice yearns and crests with a freedom that never forgets its pain. She breaks your heart and heals it at the same time."[10]