Monday, March 31, 2025

Questlove charts 50 years of SNL music in ‘Women & Gents’ : NPR

Questlove visits the Empire State Building in Celebration of The New York Times' 1000th Game of Wordle on March 14, 2024 in New York City. (Photo by Eugene Gologursky/Getty Images for Empire State Realty Trust)

“Just about any Saturday that The Roots aren’t touring and so they’re taping, I am within the viewers watching,” Questlove says of SNL.

Eugene Gologursky/Getty Pictures North America


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Eugene Gologursky/Getty Pictures North America

By his personal account, Grammy-winning musician and The Roots bandleader Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson has been concerned with Saturday Evening Reside in each doable position — apart from the one which he needs most.

“I have been a punchline on ‘Weekend Replace.’ I have been a part of a Timothée Chalamet sketch. I have been talked about in monologues,” he says. “I am part of that ecosystem nearly in each means however the a technique I wish to be, which is musical visitor. … The Roots are engaged on their seventeenth album proper now, so I am nonetheless hanging on to my dream.”

Now, as SNL marks its fiftieth anniversary, Questlove has a brand new documentary, highlighting the musical friends and music comedy sketches featured over the a long time. Women & Gents… 50 Years of SNL Music is the work of a storied musician and filmmaker who remembers watching the present when he was a child rising up in Philly.

“I used to be there from the very, very starting,” Questlove says. “[There] was nothing prefer it. I do know that is the cliché that you’ll hear loads about this fiftieth anniversary, however there was really nothing prefer it on tv.”

One change he is seen through the years, each on SNL and on The Tonight Present Starring Jimmy Fallon, the place he is bandleader, is that right now’s musical friends usually tend to be lip-syncing than their predecessors have been. He calls it the “post-Thriller impact,” whereby musicians really feel stress to bop and carry out completely each time.

“The Thriller impact is, it have to be good,” he says. “And I am sort of from the varsity of warts and all. Like, I like seeing the warts. I like seeing the pimples, the errors. To me, that is the human contact. And I believe folks have to belief that extra. However, you realize, issues do not must be Instagram filter good 24/7.”

Half 2 of Recent Air‘s interview with Questlove, about his different documentary on Hulu, SLY LIVES! (aka The Burden of Black Genius), will air in coming weeks.

Interview highlights

On the documentary portraying issues going flawed or not as deliberate  

That is the factor about SNL is there is a danger issue concerned. And often it begins with “no.” Like Eddie Murphy talks about, I didn’t wish to do sizzling tub with James Brown. Justin Timberlake goes on and on about attempting to persuade Beyoncé to do that “Single Women” sketch. Like, every little thing begins [with] “no.” And it is, like, “Wow, you nearly talked your self out of historical past.” And I am attempting to get folks within the thoughts state that, oftentimes we get in our personal heads about why one thing will not work. And generally you simply acquired to take a danger and also you by no means know. This may be a part of the American fiber, the historical past of it.

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On a 2004 incident through which Ashlee Simpson was proven to be lip syncing on SNL

Ashlee Simpson had a sore throat and was just a little iffy about her singing, so she opted to lip-sync as a substitute. And her drummer, who’s controlling on the music, by accident performs the flawed tune for the second tune.

They might have simply patiently simply stopped the tune and began another time as if nothing occurred. However she infamously does a bizarre dance and runs offstage, sort of humiliated, and so they go to industrial. It simply so occurs that Oz Rodriguez, my co-director of this documentary, stated that additionally they have the audio recording of the manufacturing room, like what was occurring on the time. And for me, it was so hilarious to listen to the producers and the administrators within the management room. To me, it feels like a bunch of youngsters that stole their mother and father’ automobile in San Francisco and the brakes simply give out in a San Francisco hill happening 100 mph. Like, what will we do? Oh no! You get to see what’s beneath the trunk. And that, to me, is probably the most fascinating a part of SNL, the way it’s in a position to occur each week with out fail.

On SNL introducing America to rap

Saturday Evening Reside is the primary time that America and the world will get to see what hip-hop tradition is. The very first rap efficiency on TV is when Deborah Harry hosts the present in 1981 and brings on Funky 4 + 1. … There have been different fashionable teams on the time, like there was Grandmaster Flash and the Livid 5 and The Sugarhill Gang, each [with], like, platinum hits and actually music- and culture-changing songs on the time. However she took a liking to this group as a result of it was just like Blondie, a band that had a lady within the lead of it. …

For me, that is such an SNL transfer the place these first 10 years, they weren’t about who’s the most well-liked particular person to deliver scores? And it was at all times just like the cool issue, like, who’s the most well-liked particular person now? Who’s the particular person beneath that individual that we may reinforce? And that is like a major instance of how SNL at all times had their finger within the pulse of who’s subsequent. And because of this, come 20 years later, lots of these first-time acts … like them getting Run-D.M.C. earlier than Run-D.M.C. was Run-D.M.C or them getting Prince earlier than Prince was Prince, or the Speaking Heads or Devo, whoever. A number of these dangers that they took within the first 10 to fifteen years, these guys will wind up being, like, the family names and the fiber of the mainstream as soon as SNL turns into the mainstream, as a substitute of the underground. So Deborah Harry utilizing her energy to deliver consideration to a tradition that nobody knew about like that may be a prime second of the SNL impact and the way it builds American leisure tradition.

On the un-hummable SNL theme tune

It is probably the most iconic, nondescript theme tune. Just about any Saturday that The Roots aren’t touring and so they’re taping, I am within the viewers, watching, and that, to me, is among the most humorous issues ever. Like, you realize it if you hear it, you realize, that is SNL. It is a feeling. It is nearly prefer it’s the final theme that gives a sense, however not any proof of it. It is like attempting to place water in your pocket or one thing like that. It is ample, however it’s no matter you need it to be. … I love the truth that SNL, for 50 years, has been in a position to present a sense with out essentially melodic proof to it.

On musical friends at The Tonight Present being consumed with nerves

I am actually huge on micro meditation and simply sitting in a quiet room for, like, 10 minutes earlier than I’m going on, as a result of generally it’s a must to simply calm your self down as a way to actually give attention to what it’s a must to do. However lots of occasions, artists are in their very own heads and so they typically discuss themselves out of the magic, as a result of if you’re worrying, you are nearly praying for one thing dangerous to occur — that is my definition of worrying. “I hope I do not mess up.” You are principally saying, “Hey, I want to mess up,” simply subconsciously. So because of this, most artists will stall, take their time, be an hour late, be two hours late, not present up in any respect, hijack their profession within the title of concern. And as at all times, when you do it, then it is, like, that is all it was? No huge deal. However I am used to it, as a result of I have been doing this for a few a long time. Oftentimes, I will pull an artist to the aspect and simply be, like, “OK, I would like you to hearken to my voice. I would like you to inhale. Exhale.” I try this loads to them, particularly the brand new artists which are nervous and scared.

Ann Marie Baldonado and Anna Bauman produced and edited this interview for broadcast. Bridget Bentz, Molly Seavy-Nesper and Beth Novey tailored it for the net.

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