The best queer music documentaries you can't miss
From poignant coming-of-age tales to provocative trailblazers, these are the seminal groundbreaking documentaries to add to your must-watch list this Pride month
Following the release of Memories from the Dance Floor season 2, I couldn’t help reflecting, that being from Northern Ireland, where it was hard to grow up gay and where many LGBTQ+ people leave and never come back, I had such little access to queer spaces. It’s in you to just feel like an outsider, doubly so. My writing has always been about LGBTQ+ social affairs, and importantly, celebrating queer life and culture. This idea has just bubbled in me for some time.
What drew me to documenting the UK’s LGBTQ+ clubs in this format, was I wanted people to hear the real voices of the workers, artists, and party people, it helps it to feel as lively and accessible and as gossipy as it should! Everyone deserves a share in this history.
I want it to serve as a community binder, education, and reminder of the importance of these spaces. It feels so necessary right now – there is an obsession in the right-wing media, and in-fighting, that’s fracturing our community. Most of all, it’s about a loud, proud celebration that will hold generations today close and unite future ones.
Something that struck me throughout the making of Memories from the Dance Floor was how integral and central the music was to all of this. Our music.
A brief history
Over the past decade, LGBTQ+ music has grown in mainstream popularity, especially as more artists openly identify as queer across genres and borders. Queer music, however, has been largely reduced to LGBTQ+ playlists, without an acknowledgment of this music’s central role in our history or radical politics.
In every queer space — from disco clubs to protests, queer bars, pride festivals and our own intimate spaces — music has long been central to queer self-expression and communal bonding. Through music, we build community, carve out visible space, take political action and make history; this cannot be contained to a single pride playlist.
During movements for civil rights, antiwar, queer liberation and many more during the 1960s, queer people congregated largely in bars and clubs where jukeboxes were the sole source of music. Anyone could choose the song, and these choices communicated personality, style, and social and cultural identities. In the 1970s and ‘80s, disco provided a haven for queer people facing the burden of the AIDS epidemic. Songs like I Will Survive were not written by or for LGBTQIA+ people, but in a time of mass death, they provided a source of communal hope and respite: a place of life.
Brush up on your knowledge
There's a rich tapestry of queer music history. From the heart-wrenching stories of artists lost too soon to the trailblazing icons who redefined genres. You may have already familiarised yourself with our community’s rich cultural legacy through groundbreaking works like 1990’s Paris Is Burning. But, if you haven’t, stop what you’re doing and watch it immediately.
Music and club spaces have been one of the few realms in which queer folk of all stripes have been able to express themselves, live openly and achieve excellence over the years. Contributing equally to queer history and pop culture at large, our community has a wealth of artistic riches.
With that in mind, brush up on your queer musical icons, and celebrate Pride (and the launch of my podcast), with these 10 essential LGBTQ+ documentaries.
The Nomi Song (2004)
In the brief time that he spent on Earth, the star power of Klaus Nomi burned so very bright. Born Klaus Sperber, he trained in Germany as a professional opera singer and decided to cast his lot in New York, reinventing himself as Klaus Nomi – an outré alien pop star. Within five years he had risen through the ranks of the city’s art scene, worked with David Bowie, built an astonishing body of work for himself and tragically passed away from AIDS in 1983. It’s a breathless story told with a fan’s loving sense of respect in The Nomi Song – the most comprehensive portrait of the artist we have.
Wild Combination: A Portrait of Arthur Russell (2008)
The cultural legacies that were stolen and cut short by the AIDS epidemic are losses almost too painful to fully come to terms with. Films like Wild Combination: A Portrait of Arthur Russell may not make it any easier to do so, but they vitally preserve what legacies we do have left to enshrine. As the documentary so poignantly conveys, Russell was at the heart of every musical scene in 1970s and 80s New York, from punk’s heyday at CBGB to soundtracking the poetry recitations of friend Allen Ginsberg. It illuminates the intangible, genre-hopping genius of his work with the same grace and care that it shows in capturing the private life of a truly singular talent – one whose absence continues to reverberate with each passing year.
Hit so Hard (2011)
An astounding drummer and an out and proud lesbian – which was no small feat when entering the music industry in the 90s – Patty Schemel is what cult heroes are made of. Her journey was not, however, entirely easy. Culled from a treasure trove of footage she recorded while on tour with Hole in support of their seminal 1994 album Live Through This, Hit So Hard functions as both a front row seat to grunge history and a stark warning on the perils of substance abuse. But it is also, importantly, a tale of redemption; a paean to artistic and personal triumph.
The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye (2011)
Godparent of industrial music, performance artist, occultist and post-gender theorist; the late Genesis P-Orridge certainly didn’t limit herself to one practice. Though acknowledged as a pioneer and a transgressive provocateur, it was after her death in 2020 that her legacy was examined, amongst Cosey Fanni Tutti’s allegations of physical and emotional abuse, which were published in the autobiography Art Sex Music in 2017.
The two artists considered their bodies to be interchangeable, though Fanni Tutti claimed that her freedoms were oppressed by P-Orridge, who allegedly pressured her into having unprotected sex. P-Orridge denied the claims.
This idea of interchangeability is explored in detail through The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye, a documentary on a different relationship in P-Orridge’s life. Together with Lady Jaye, the two embarked on the project Pandrogeny, an attempt to merge into a single being through the use of multiple body modification surgeries; a pandrogyne. A thought-provoking watch, this documentary captures one of the most remarkable experiments of queer theory in pop culture history.
I Am Divine (2013)
The world’s most dangerous drag queen is, of course, predominantly beloved for her star-making, iconic roles in John Waters-directed classics like Pink Flamingos and Female Trouble. But Divine’s rise above the counter-culture into pop culture was thanks in no small part to her string of delirious Hi-NRG disco hits in the early 1980s. Produced by the omnipresent maestro Bobby Orlando, songs like You Think You’re a Man and Shoot Your Shot pushed the campiness of the genre to the most unsubtle heights imaginable. This era is lovingly documented in the heartwarming I Am Divine, a film that rightfully assesses Divine as both a subversive trailblazer and a misfit who gloriously staked their claim in the spotlight.
Strike a Pose (2016)
While Madonna’s Vogue was a hit upon its release in 1990, it’s worth evaluating the extent to which it co-opts the ballroom culture that originated from Black and Latino LGBTQ+ communities. During her blockbuster Blond Ambition tour, she shared the stage with the dancers who had inspired her, and featured them in her 1991 documentary Truth or Dare. But for those seeking a course correction, look no further than Strike a Pose: a film that returns to the dancers featured in the earlier documentary and tells the stories of their lives in the years since, squarely placing them at the centre of a narrative that was theirs to begin with.
Queercore: How to Punk a Revolution (2017)
To anyone self-identifying as queer, this film is an absolute essential. Charting the brash, beautiful history of queercore, this documentary offers a time-hopping, macro view of the vibrant intersection of punk, feminist, anarchist and all things homo-cultures. From Peaches detailing the bastions of the electroclash scene to Bruce LaBruce elaborating on their political pornography – or Lynn Breedlove summing up the ethos with: “This is the new feminism. This is how we’re doing it now. If you don’t like it suck my dick” – Queercore: How to Punk a Revolution is an unholy oracle of our culture in all its confrontational glory.
Who the Fuck Is That Guy? The Fabulous Journey of Michael Alago (2017)
A name that didn’t get the recognition it deserved: Michael Alago quietly led a landmark career in the music industry. Or as Who the Fuck Is That Guy? shows, perhaps not so quietly. Growing up with a Hasidic community in Brooklyn, the young, gay, Puerto Rican Michael Alago went out with the best New York had to offer, and decided early on he was going to make it in show business. At the tender age of 24, he had become an A&R executive and signed Metallica. Across a career that has seen him work with everyone from Nina Simone to John Lydon and Cyndi Lauper, Alago emerges as one of the great unsung gay trailblazers.
Love Me Like You Should: The Brave and Bold Sylvester (2020)
Love Me Like You Should: The Brave and Bold Sylvester examines the enormous cultural footprint that the one and only Sylvester left behind. Unwaveringly queer and flouting gender norms at every turn, Sylvester was a titanic force in the gay community. Not to mention talented; with an accomplished ear and a falsetto for the gods, his polished take on disco resulted in the hit You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real). Across its brief runtime, the documentary conveys the huge impact he had in representing Black gay excellence, both within and outside of the music industry.
Patrick (2020)
As Sylvester’s close friend and gifted producer, Patrick Cowley holds an equally large amount of reverence to the communities he left behind. A synthesiser wizard and a formative influence on the nascent electronic music revolution, Cowley was among the first wave taken by the AIDS epidemic in the early 80s. The 2020 art film, Patrick, is an esoteric take on the documentary format, pairing 16mm footage of Cowley’s former haunt in San Francisco with his effervescent music – a juxtaposition that mirrors the sudden, yet profoundly felt, absence of the artist himself.