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California Documentary Project

Chicano Rock! The Sounds of East L.A.

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Produced, Written, Directed and Edited by
Jon Wilkman

Narrated by
Edward James Olmos

Featuring Lalo Guerrero, Don Tosti, Ritchie Valens, The Premiers, Cannibal and the Headhunters, Thee Midniters, Mark Guerrero, El Chicano, Tierra, The Brat, Los Lobos, Ozomatli. Quetzal

Chicano Rock will be broadcast nationally on PBS. Stay tuned for details.

This 90-minute documentary tells the story of Chicano rock ‘n’ roll and how it defined – and continues to define – the Latino community in East Los Angeles.

“From Ritchie Valens to Los Lobos and beyond, we tell the story of kids from East Los Angeles who struggled to find a musical identity of their own, and succeeded,” said filmmaker Jon Wilkman. Wilkman’s work has been honored with numerous awards, including three television Emmys. He and his wife, Nancy, are partners in Wilkman Productions, a documentary production company.

“The roots of Chicano rock ‘n’ roll can be traced to traditional barrios throughout the American Southwest, but most importantly, to the streets and neighborhoods of East Los Angeles," Wilkman said. “Kids from local schools, such as Garfield and Roosevelt High, met, played music and began a musical dialogue with an emerging rock ‘n’ roll tradition.

“Chicano rock ‘n’ roll is the sound of generation after generation, listening and absorbing, reacting and responding, searching for and finding an identity with music.

“Chicano Rock! is a major untold Californian and American story,” Wilkman added. “We hope the film conveys the on-going interaction between art and social change through the words and experiences of members of the Chicano East Los Angeles community.”

© 2007 The California Council for the Humanities