
ST. PAUL, Minn. — A new documentary from Twin Cities PBS will transport audiences back to the bohemian heyday of Cedar-Riverside, the Minneapolis neighborhood that nurtured a fusion of folk, bluegrass, reggae and rock — and helped shape Minnesota’s musical identity.
The Wild West Bank Sound will premiere April 19 at the Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival (MSPIFF) before airing on TPT 2 and streaming on the PBS App on April 21. The film blends archival footage, historic photographs and firsthand accounts from musicians and community members to trace the rise of a creative hub often described as mythical in local cultural lore.
“For many Minnesotans, the West Bank holds an almost mythic place in our cultural zeitgeist,” said Daniel Bergin, executive producer and WEM Endowed Director of History at Twin Cities PBS. “What makes this film special is hearing directly from the musicians and community members who lived it. Their stories show how a small neighborhood became an incubator for creativity that helped shape Minnesota’s music identity.”
The documentary comes from the same production team behind acclaimed music histories including The Minneapolis Sound, First Avenue: Closer to the Stars and Minnesota Hardcore. But while those films focused on iconic venues and genres, The Wild West Bank Sound zooms in on a single neighborhood’s ecosystem — the coffeehouses, bars, record shops and activist spaces that turned Cedar-Riverside into a gathering place for experimentation and artistic expression.