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New IMAX movie ‘America’s Musical Journey’ stars Aloe Blacc
By BETH J. HARPAZ, AP Travel Editor
NEW YORK (AP) — Can the appeal of America’s music help reverse the downturn in international visitors coming to the U.S.?
Brand USA, which markets U.S. tourism around the world, hopes so.  e agency is behind a new IMAX movie called “Amer- ica’s Musical Journey” that premieres this week.
 e 40-minute  lm aims to show o  America’s musical heritage to the world. It’s narrated by Morgan Freeman and stars Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter Aloe Blacc as he explores American music history in cities like New Orleans, Mem- phis, Detroit and Miami.
Speaking at a media preview in New York on Tuesday, Blacc said he hopes the movie sparks in viewers a “love for music. I want them to learn about the growth of di erent genres that were born here in the U.S. like jazz, blues, rock, even hip- hop. ... If you get to see ‘America’s Musical Journey,’ you’ll see all the best there is to see here in the U.S. Politics aside, it’s a beautiful country.”
Tom Garzilli, chief marketing o cer for Brand USA, said the  lm is designed to “remind the world how diverse, all-inclu- sive and welcoming the country is.”
International visitors to the U.S. dipped nearly 4 percent during the  rst eight months of 2017 compared to the same period in 2016. Some in the travel industry have blamed the downturn on anti-im- migrant and anti-foreigner rhetoric from the administration of President Donald Trump.
 e movie looks at the roots of Afri- can-American musical traditions in the South, beginning with music brought here by enslaved Africans. Over time, that mu- sic developed into genres like gospel, the blues and jazz.  e stories of the legendary trumpeter Louis Armstrong in New Or- leans and rock ‘n’ roll phenomenon Elvis Presley in Memphis are showcased along
with scenes of break-dancers in Times Square, country music from Nashville and Motown in Detroit.
 e movie follows Blacc as he trav-
els from city to city, learning from local musicians and incorporating their various styles into a new song of his own, “My Story.” In one memorable scene during a stop in Miami, he gets a lesson in Latin beats from superstar Gloria Estefan and her husband, Emilio.
Blacc said he’d been to all the cities in the  lm before making the movie but he particularly enjoyed his visit to Memphis, visiting Graceland and digging deeper into Presley’s legacy.
 e  lm soundtrack features several
of Blacc’s other songs including “Wake Me Up” and “I Need a Dollar,” along with classics like Presley’s “Jailhouse Rock” and Armstrong’s “What a Wonderful World.”
 is is the second movie from Brand USA in collaboration with MacGillivray Freeman Films.  e  rst, “National Parks Adventure,” celebrated the beauty and thrills of America’s parks. It was released in 2016 and shown in dozens of venues
around the world, earning nearly $23 million.  e  lms cost $12.5 million each to produce and distribute.
Garzilli said surveys of audiences who saw the movie about national parks found that 81 percent said they were more likely to visit the U.S. as a result and 62 percent had decided to choose the U.S. over anoth- er destination.
 e  lm, sponsored by Expedia and AirCanada, premieres at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Air and Space Muse- um on  ursday in Washington, D.C.
___ http://americasmusicaljourney.com/
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