If you are looking to get informed about the man and his story then this isn't the film for you, but if you like his music and want to see it performed on this very nice looking footage then it will be a very enjoyable 90 minutes and is well worth the look for that.
![thelonious monk quartet thelonious monk quartet](https://medicitv-b.imgix.net/movie/thelonious-monk-quartet-live-in-brussels-part-i_d.jpg)
This is welcome as it all good stuff and has that extra addition of seeing it being performed rather than just listened to on CD. What there is though is music being played live while the camera watches, small moments observed and some contributions from friends and family (although really the vast majority of the film is the music). There isn't too much talking in this footage I'm not sure if Monk was particularly talky but if he was then it doesn't come over in the footage we have here. A documentary film about the life of pianist and jazz great Thelonious Sphere Monk. In early 2005, an engineer at the Library of Congress accidentally discovered, in an unmarked box, the recording of Thelonious Monks and John Coltranes. With Jimmy Cleveland, Harry Colomby, John Coltrane, Ray Copeland. This focus is facilitated by lots of footage which was apparently found in the 1980's which was filmed inside the studio, out on tour, in hotel rooms etc. Thelonious Monk: Straight, No Chaser: Directed by Charlotte Zwerin. This was a little disappointing given the agenda which I came to the film with, but it was replaced by other things to enjoy since the film is very much about the music – which I guess the man was too, so that works. It is both a good and a bad thing that this film doesn't do that particularly, since it is not really a documentary in terms of having lots of facts and insight thrown at you. This was sort of what attracted me to this film because I was interested to know a little bit more about the guy. So many of us would instantly put a name to it when we hear Round Midnight for example, but really wouldn't be able to talk much about the man himself as "proper" fans would. Monk is one of those artists that even the very casual jazz fan knows – a group which I very much include myself in.