Bernard MacMahon's debut film was
American Epic, an award-winning
documentary film series about the first recordings of
roots music in the
United States during the 1920s and their cultural, social and technological impact on
North America and the world. Directed and co-written by MacMahon, the story was told through twelve ethnically and musically diverse musicians who auditioned for and participated in those pioneering
recording sessions;
The Carter Family, the
Memphis Jug Band, Elder J.E. Burch,
The Williamson Brothers,
Dick Justice,
Charley Patton, The Hopi Indian Chanters,
Joseph Kekuku,
Lydia Mendoza, the
Breaux Family,
Mississippi John Hurt, and
Blind Willie Johnson. The film series was created, written and produced by MacMahon,
Allison McGourty and
Duke Erikson. It was first broadcast on May 16, 2017, in the United States and was narrated by
Robert Redford. The films contained many previously untold stories, a vast amount of previously unseen and extremely rare archival footage and dramatically advanced audio restorations of the 1920s and 1930s recordings. When MacMahon presented his vision for the films and the archival footage to Robert Redford at their first meeting, Redford pronounced it “America’s greatest untold story”. Many critics have cited the
American Epic films as being one of the best music documentaries ever made. During production of the
American Epic documentary series, MacMahon directed and co-wrote
The American Epic Sessions, a documentary film in which a
sound engineer restored the fabled long-lost first
electrical sound recording system from 1925 and twenty contemporary artists paid tribute to the momentous machine by attempting to record songs on it for the first time in 80 years. The film starred
Steve Martin,
Nas,
Elton John,
Willie Nelson,
Merle Haggard,
Alabama Shakes,
Jack White,
Taj Mahal,
Ana Gabriel,
The Avett Brothers,
Rhiannon Giddens, and
Beck. It also explored the extent to which the recordings made on it in the 1920s influenced and inspired contemporary music. The film involved a decade of work restoring the machine, which was pieced together from spare parts scattered across the globe, in order to better understand the origins of modern recording technology, and the influence the machine had on world culture. The film received widespread acclaim for its direction, musical performances, sound and cinematography. In September 2017 the
University of Chicago Laboratory Schools announced a nine-month
preschool to
high school educational program based on MacMahon's
American Epic films beginning on October 6, 2017. The school founded by American educator
John Dewey in 1896 has over 2,015 students enrolled in 15 grades. The program featured MacMahon and producer and co-writer Allison McGourty as
Artists-in-Residence. He is a member of the
Directors Guild of America, the
Television Academy, the
Writers Guild of America West, the
Sundance Institute and is the co-founder of Lo-Max Films. == Awards and honors ==