With the recent announcement that Linda Ronstadt would be a 2019 Kennedy Center honoree, the affectionate documentary portrait “Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice” makes for a timely opportunity, in advance of the December ceremony, to recall why the 73-year-old singer is getting the award.
The Kennedy Center’s recognition of lifetime achievement — among the most prestigious prizes in the performing-arts world — is certainly well-deserved, as evidenced by the many live-performance clips of Ronstadt (who retired from performing in 2009 because of Parkinson’s disease), and the expected parade of laudatory reminiscences from the likes of fellow artists Jackson Browne, Emmylou Harris, Dolly Parton, Bonnie Raitt and J.D. Souther, along with the professional assessments of Cameron Crowe and other music journalists.
The film also reminds us how outspoken Ronstadt was — and is — about her liberal views, including an old interview with an entertainment reporter who seems genuinely astonished by how direct Ronstadt is in response to a question about her politics. (This July, when Ronstadt learned that she would receive Kennedy Center Honors, she responded, true to form, that she hoped President Trump would not attend. “I don’t want to be in the same room with him,” she told The Post.)
If there’s one drawback to “The Sound of My Voice,” it’s that Ronstadt herself declined to sit down with the film’s directors, Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman, for sit-down interviews that might have showcased more of such frank talk. Instead, she merely narrates the film, delivering a somewhat unspontaneous-sounding, disembodied voice-over that carries us from her childhood in Tuscon to her stellar career in Los Angeles.