23 October 2016 (2016-10-23) (New Orleans Film Festival)
24 August 2018 (2018-08-24)
Running time
95 minutes
Countries
United Kingdom United States
Language
English
One Note at a Time is a British/American documentary film directed by Renee Edwards. The film follows New Orleans musicians post-Hurricane Katrina. It is dedicated to the late drummer Herman Roscoe Ernest. The film was officially released in the UK and Ireland in 2018 and is due for release in the US and Canada during 2019.
Background
The film explores the relationship between New Orleans, the musicians, the environment, and the American social welfare system that is unable to support them. Many of the musicians live and work in poverty, going from gig to gig, needing to pay for medical and living expenses. The city, at a tipping point when it comes to supporting the musicians, still needs them for its culture and economy. Much screen time is spent with the New Orleans Musicians' Clinic who struggle to provide medical care to artists too well off for Medicaid and too poor to afford Obamacare.
Filmed over a 4-year period, One Note at a Time is a feature-length documentary that follows the lives of the musicians and the difficulties they face. It highlights young musicians and how the gentrification of the city has brought with it new sound pollution laws, which impact the 24-hour party culture the city has enjoyed.
The film was screened at film and music festivals in the UK, Germany and the US in 2017, receiving a number of accolades. The official release by UK and Ireland distributor Munro Films was August 24, 2018, where the film was screened in UK cinemas. The digital film was released on September 3, 2018. The official soundtrack containing a unique live recorded track by New Orleans' icon Dr John was released worldwide by Louisiana Red Hot Records on August 24, 2018.[1] US and Canada digital release by The Golden Media Group, began on April 14, 2019.
Soundtrack
No.
Artist
LengthTitle
Length
1
Bicycle Ballad Sam
Touch The Hem Of His Garment (Live)
00:21
2
Dr. John
If Musicians Ain't Got A Chance To Live
00:08
3
The Hot 8 Brass Band
Let me Do My Thing (Remix)
08:25
4
Kermit Ruffins
It Was A Blessing
00:16
5
Ray Russell
What The Future Brings
01:20
6
Damion Neville and The Charmaine Neville Band
Papa Was A Rolling Stone (Live)
04:51
7
Felice Guilmont
Everybody's Gone
00:13
8
Felice Guilmont
Higher
04:06
9
Chip Wilson and Jesse Moore
Slip Away
03:04
10
Shelton "Shakespear" Alexander
Second Lining (Live)
01:09
11
To Be Continued Brass Band
Ray Nagin (Give Me My Projects Back)
07:45
12
To Be Continued Brass Band
We're Not Criminals
00:19
13
New Orleans Ragtime Orchestra
I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate (Live)
05:17
14
Irma Thomas
Just Passing Through
00:14
15
Bud Tower
Please Don't Take Me Home
05:01
16
Ms Pearl
Summertime (Live)
00:36
17
Walter Payton, Jr.
Touched Somebody
00:24
18
Cliff Hines
Tehran
06:04
19
Ben Jaffe
Die A Healthy Man
00:23
20
Dr. John
Proper Fitting Way
00:24
21
Dr. John
Roscoes Song / Down The Road (Live)
09:54
22
Ray Russel
One Note at a Time
02:15
23
Barry Martyn
To Hell With The Girls
00:31
24
Barry Martyn
Down By The Riverside
04:20
25
Al "Carnival Time" Johnson
Carnival Time
02:41
26
Ben Jaffe
A Place I've Never Seen Before
00:20
27
Uptown Jazz Orchestra
Blue Monk (Live)
01:14
28
Kermit Ruffins
New Orleans People
00:19
29
Dr. John, Gaynielle Neville, Cyril Neville, Amasi Miller, Shannon Powell, Jesse Boyd, Detroit Brooks, Paul Pattan & Donald Harrison Jr.
This Little Light of Mine (Live)
01:32
30
Ray Russell
From The Heart (Digital Bonus Track)
02:49
31
Gypsy Elise And The Royal Blues
Funky Tribe (Digital Bonus Track)
04:39
Awards
The film has won international and domestic festival awards, including:
Best Feature Documentary – Studio City International Film Festival (2017)[2]
Gold Winner – Los Angeles Film Review Industry Awards (2017)[3]
Best Documentary – Nottingham International Film Festival (2017)[4]