Shake! Otis at Monterey (1987) Poster

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7/10
Can't Stop Shaking
boblipton8 September 2020
Otis Redding performs at Montrey. In this period, he was an enormously popular performer, rivaled only by James Brown for the level of his energy. Yet while everyone was in awe of Brown, Redding had something more important: people paid attention to his performances, and changed what they wer doing. He was influential.

Looking at this documentary, you can see why. There's an innocence in his stage personna, a sense ofhe's getting up there, having fun,and somewhat surprised that people are enjoying it. He can see that pleasure in his sidemen, the smiling drummer, the guitarist racing to keep up. He was a genuine artist and he's been greatly missed
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8/10
Unjustly shadowed by Hendrix
Spuzzlightyear19 June 2005
During the Monterey Festival, D.A. Pennebaker shot the whole festival, and then released 2 special films focusing on 2 artists, one is Jimi Hendrix (which I've also reviewed) and the other is Otis Rettig. Let me just pause here and say I knew NOTHING about Otis when I watched this (he wrote Sitting On The Dock Of The Bay, right?) and while I STILL don't know much about him, I sure got to see him perform! It's interesting to see that this film by Pennebaker gets higher ratings by the people who have seen it, and I agree, because this guy puts on a SHOW that even I was amazed by. Full of great soul numbers and surprise inclusions (Satisfaction and Respect get great covers) the man doesn't care if it's pouring rain out (which it was) or if it was 1:00a (ditto) all his energy went into this performance, and it truly is a sight to behold.
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9/10
Man, this guy was amazing!
lukecon-6343621 July 2021
I saw this on TCM and it certainly is an unforgettable experience. It really stays with you-thinking about the influence this great musician had. It only lasts 20 minutes, but I gotta say that what I did see I cannot and will not forget.

This is a beautiful document of a beautiful moment in music history.
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10/10
Electrifying Concert Footage of the "Big O" at Monterey Pop Festival
Popeye-815 May 2000
Otis Redding was one of the titanic figures in rock/soul music history...this video should be required viewing for ALL fans of music, if for no other reason but to see what we lost so long ago. Redding took what soul artists were calling "Whitey's Festival" and made it HIS showcase, despite getting the worst spot on the bill. Again, a "must see" for any music history fan.
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8/10
Shake and Respect will give you Satisfaction
classicsoncall14 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This short film is only nineteen minutes long, but if you stand up and try to match Otis Redding move for move, it will wear you out. This was Redding's first major appearance before a predominantly white crowd and it made him an overnight success. Backed by Booker T. and the MGs and the Mar-Keys, Otis puts on a dazzling display of energy and showmanship, putting his all into songs like 'Shake', 'Respect' and the Rolling Stones' first major hit, 'Satisfaction'. His attempt to slow things down a bit with 'Try a Little Tenderness' eventually results in the same manic energy as the rest of his act. Filmed in 1967 at the famous Monterey Pop Festival, this companion piece to the movie of the same name wasn't released until 1987, along with "Jimi Plays Monterey", a somewhat longer set featuring Jimi Hendrix and his Experience. Both are worthwhile to seek out on their own merit, and in some respects, might be even better than the longer film. It would have been cool to hear Otis sing the major hit he wrote, "Dock of the Bay", but unfortunately, he didn't record it until December of that same year, 1967, only three days before his untimely and tragic death. Just think what might have been.
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9/10
tender and FAST
Quinoa198413 May 2016
For a while I didn't know a lot of Otis Redding's music. What a fool I was! A song like "Try a Little Tenderness" is one of those songs that I just knew growing up, it was around here and there (and of all places it was featured in that forgotten 2000 movie Duets). But Redding's set at the Monterey Pop festival may get somewhat overlooked when compared to some of the other major highlights of that festival, which are among the most iconic of any time - Hendrix smashing the guitar on fire at the end of 'Wild Thing', The Who's performance, Ravi Shankar - but Redding is no slouch when it comes to putting on a show; on the contrary his enthusiasm and energy is infectious.

Do I think he's quite as talented as those others I mentioned? Maybe not quite, but does it matter? The man and his band (including people who would go on to be in the Blues Brothers, Donald "Duck: Dunn is unmistakable) perform in this little 18 minute extra - included along with Hendrix's full performance as documented by DA Pennebaker and his collaborators - and it includes two covers ("Respect", which he originally wrote and sings the s*** out of like his life depends on it and "Satisfaction", a decent cover that builds and ebbs and crescendos) as well as some original tunes. You know you're in for something at least compelling when the man starts off by having the audience respond and yell with him "SHAKE!" and then goes into the rest of his numbers. Even on the slower song he really reaches down deep to bring out the soul that's right there, all the way so that it's 200% at maximum capacity soulfulness.

In other words, Shake! Otis at Monterey is not to be overlooked when in the scope of the rest of the artists at that festival. Also, Pennebaker brings a montage with the 'Tenderness' number of a whole slew of faces of women (and some babies and small children) and it creates a wonderful compliment, as if he's singing to ALL the women at the festival - which, of course, at that time, might as well have been their whole world.
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7/10
This short seems to filch a song from the preview for . . .
pixrox116 July 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . RESPECT. The version of the latter film's title song seems subdued, milquetoast and wan during SHAKE: OTIS AT MONTEREY. The sock-it-to-me's seemed tacked on here as a belated afterthought, and the Re-Re-Re's are nowhere to be heard. If you haven't seen RESPECT yet, viewing SHAKE first may sort of spoil the experience by reducing its thunder to that of a wayward wobbling lightning bug.
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8/10
Short but sweet
jellopuke10 September 2020
A legend at play showing why he was a legend. Epic but all too brief. Like his life.
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7/10
no more, no less
SnoopyStyle7 September 2020
It's June 17, 1967 Monterey, California. Tommy Smothers comes on stage and introduces Otis Redding. It's twenty minutes of Otis performing. This is exactly what you expect, no more, no less. Sure, it's great for fans but it's great for any music lovers. His music is easy to love. There is one weird thing that the filmmakers did with "Try a Little Tenderness". They took the words "Young girls they do get wearied" to literally start a montage of every girl at the festival. It's a little weird and a little stalkery. Maybe I'm being too sensitive.
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10/10
Otis Redding totally crushes it at Monterey
Woodyanders1 October 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The complete set of Otis Redding's last incredible live performance at the Monterey Pop Festival. Redding proves here that he was one exceptionally dynamic and exciting performer who really knew how to work over a crowd and whip the audience into a lather. Otis gets things off to a rousing start with "Shake," does spot-on punchy covers of "Respect" and "Satisfaction," offers a show-stopping rendition of "I've Been Loving You Too Long," and closes the show with a soulful and stirring version of "Try a Little Tenderness." Moreover, both the Mar-Keys and Booker T. And the M. G.s lend Redding terrific support as they blaze through one song after another for a positively incendiary twenty minutes. Fantastic stuff.
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6/10
Otis gets the groove
Horst_In_Translation26 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Shake!: Otis at Monterey" is a 19-minute documentary short film by D.A. Pennebaker before he was Oscar-nominated. The title already says what this is about, so no need to further elaborate on the contents. Let me just say there is some pretty good music in here. Otis switches between rock and romance, but always delivers. What made this one maybe so important is that it got recorded in June 1967, not even half a year before Otis died tragically in an airplane crash. Really sad, what a talent lost. As for his legacy, such as this little film here, we can be glad to have it. I recommend checking this one out. Reding sure know how to rock the house. You wanna see it.
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