There’s something electric about watching a great music documentary. You get the backstage pass, the messy breakdowns, the triumph, and all those unguarded moments that remind you why music matters in the first place. Honestly, 2025 has been one of those years where the lineup feels unusually stacked. From Taylor Swift’s billion minutes streamed to intimate portraits of forgotten legends, the range is wild. Let’s be real, some of these documentaries hit harder than anything you’ll find on the radio right now.
1. The Greatest Night in Pop (Netflix)
This fascinating look at the making of “We Are the World” captures the excitement and chaos of the historic USA for Africa supergroup collaboration that united the era’s biggest musical stars for charity. Want to see Michael Jackson, Bruce Springsteen, and Cyndi Lauper packed into one recording booth? According to multiple industry sources, Netflix’s The Greatest Night in Pop was reported as the most watched music documentary of 2024, with roughly about 1.3 billion minutes streamed. That number is staggering, and the documentary earns every second of it. The footage feels fresh, the egos are barely contained, and the whole thing reminds you of a different era when pop stars actually cared about something bigger than their streaming numbers.
2. I Am: Celine Dion (Prime Video)
Luminate streaming ratings data cited viewership for I Am: Celine Dion at approximately 82.8 million minutes watched in the June 21 to 27, 2024 window. The documentary looks back on her long and successful career and opens up about her recent battle with stiff person syndrome. It’s brutal, and it’s beautiful. Celine doesn’t shy away from showing the physical toll her condition has taken, and she talks candidly about her uncertain future as a performer. This isn’t a victory lap, it’s a portrait of someone fighting to reclaim what made them who they are.
3. Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (Disney+)
Billboard reported in January 2024 that the Eras Tour concert film surpassed roughly $261.6 million, beating the prior record holder Michael Jackson’s This Is It. The record-breaking concert documentary captures Swift’s career-spanning stadium show with theatrical-quality production, though some say the documentary will never be as magical as the real thing, but it allows the viewer to peek into the spectacle that was defining Swift’s career. Even if you’re not a Swiftie, it’s hard not to appreciate the scale and ambition. She gives everything to that stage, and the documentary doesn’t flinch from showing the sweat behind the glitter.
4. Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé (Theatrical / Streaming)
Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé grossed approximately $44.4 million worldwide, with roughly $33.9 million domestic and around $10.5 million international, per published box office reporting. Beyoncé directed this herself, and you can feel her hand in every frame. A glossy retelling of Beyoncé’s 2018 Coachella performance, this documentary brilliantly stitches concert footage with candid rehearsal moments, showcasing how this iconic gig transformed a music festival stage into a powerful celebration of Black culture. It’s a masterclass in control, vision, and sheer performance power.
5. The Beach Boys (Disney+)
The high-profile newly restored film and Frank Marshall’s The Beach Boys documentary are available on Disney+. Disney+ officially announced that The Beach Boys documentary would stream on Disney+ beginning May 24, 2024. The documentary about the band includes never-before-seen footage and new interviews, including interviews with band members Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine, David Marks, and Bruce Johnston plus other artists including Lindsey Buckingham. This isn’t your parents’ nostalgia trip. The doc digs into Brian Wilson’s genius and the darker undercurrents behind those perfect harmonies. Essential for anyone who thinks they know the California sound.
6. Luther: Never Too Much (CNN / Max)
CNN’s press room stated that Luther: Never Too Much would premiere on January 1, 2025 at 8 p.m. ET/PT on CNN. Directed by Dawn Porter, the film follows Vandross’s journey from being a background singer to becoming a soul music icon, featuring a star-studded lineup of interviewees including Jamie Foxx and Mariah Carey, while also diving into Vandross’s collaborations with legends like David Bowie, with extensive archival footage allowing Luther to narrate much of his own story. It’s intimate, tender, and long overdue. Luther Vandross was one of the greatest voices in modern music, and this documentary finally gives him the spotlight he deserves.
7. Road Diary: Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band (Hulu)
Directed by Thom Zimny, this documentary gives the most in-depth look ever at how they create their famous live shows, with intimate access to their 2023-2024 world tour – from sweaty practice sessions to backstage chats and everything in between. This is Bruce at his most reflective, thinking about mortality, legacy, and the bond he has with his band. It’s moving in ways you don’t expect.
8. Moonage Daydream (Netflix)
Take an immersive and kaleidoscopic journey through David Bowie’s incredible life and musical career in this acclaimed – and authorized – documentary. Director Brett Morgen was granted access to an archive of roughly five million different items, including paintings, drawings, recordings, photographs, films, and journals. It was shortlisted for Best Documentary Feature at the 95th Academy Awards, and won Best Music Film at the 66th Annual Grammy Awards. This isn’t a traditional documentary. It’s sensory, hypnotic, and completely mesmerizing. Watch it on the biggest screen you can find.
9. Yacht Rock: A DOCKumentary (Max)
Born from an ironic 2005 web comedy series that playfully mocked artists like Kenny Loggins and Jimmy Buffett, this documentary reveals how a genre once dismissed as uncool soft rock transformed from a joke into a genuine cultural phenomenon, spawning dedicated radio stations and tribute bands while earning respect from a new generation of musicians. It’s funny, smart, and oddly moving. You’ll never listen to Steely Dan the same way again.
10. Return of the King: The Fall and Rise of Elvis Presley (Netflix)
A look into the story behind Elvis Presley’s 1968 comeback special. It’s a tight, focused documentary that captures one of the most pivotal moments in rock history. Elvis was written off, overweight, and making bad movies. Then he stepped on that stage and reminded everyone why he was the King. The footage is electric.
11. Olivia Rodrigo: GUTS World Tour (Netflix)
In early 2024, Olivia Rodrigo hit the road to promote her critically acclaimed second album, GUTS, with a sold-out international arena tour, and James Merryman’s concert documentary captures an exhilarating August show in Los Angeles. Rodrigo brings raw emotion and pop precision in equal measure. This is Gen Z’s answer to the concert documentary, and it’s genuinely thrilling.
12. One to One: John Lennon & Yoko Ono (Max)
Kevin MacDonald and Sam Rice-Edwards’ film follows a specific moment, in 1972, shortly after the Beatles’ breakup, when the couple was preparing for their “One to One” concert. One to One is streaming on HBO Max. Lennon performed his only solo show during this time, which was fraught with radical politics and one of his strangest records. The documentary is a chance to reassess one of the most consequential and confounding artists of the twentieth century.
13. Sly Lives! (aka The Burden of Black Genius) (Hulu / Max)
Following his Best Documentary Oscar win in 2022, the Summer of Soul director and Roots drummer returns with a deep look into Sly and the Family Stone, examining an artist who sought to bridge the divide with a mix of Black and white musicians with hits such as “Everyday People” and “Dance to the Music,” featuring testimonials from André 3000, Clive Davis, Nile Rodgers, Chaka Khan, and more. It’s raw, sad, and essential viewing for anyone who wants to understand how genius and addiction collide.
14. Ladies & Gentlemen… 50 Years of SNL Music (Peacock)
The documentary comes from Grammy and Academy Award-winning filmmaker Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson and Emmy Award-winning Oz Rodriguez and shows the impact “Saturday Night Live” has had on music and musicians’ stardom over the past 50 years, featuring clips of artist performances, interviews with the cast and archival footage. SNL has launched careers, revived legends, and given us some of the most unforgettable musical moments in TV history. This documentary proves it.
15. Eno (VOD / Select Screenings)
Eno debuted at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival and is noted for its innovative way of presenting a documentary, showing the ongoing changes in art and technology through Eno’s influential career. The film uses a generative structure that changes with every screening, which feels perfectly suited to Brian Eno’s ethos. It’s experimental, philosophical, and unlike anything else on this list.
16. Lolla: The Story of Lollapalooza (Tubi)
Documentarian/promoter/frontman Perry Farrell utilizes never-before-seen footage to show how a simple alternative rock touring festival became a global cultural institution that helped reshape the music industry. Lollapalooza changed the game in the nineties, and this documentary captures that chaotic, sweaty, world-changing energy.
17. Wham! (Netflix)
Since July 5th, Netflix has been airing a documentary titled Wham!, devoted to the iconic British pop duo of the 1980s, directed by Chris Smith and featuring interviews with the two stars, the legendary and late George Michael and his friend Andrew Ridgeley. The duo struggled to be taken seriously as artists, and the documentary explores the limits of their musical journey. It’s fun, bittersweet, and surprisingly moving.
18. STAX: Soulsville, U.S.A. (Max)
Unlike many documentaries about musicians, this one focuses on a record company. Stax Records in Memphis, Tennessee became one of the most influential studios of soul music and launched the careers of stars such as Otis Redding and Isaac Hayes. The HBO documentary will showcase how the record company broke racial barriers through footage and interviews. It’s a masterclass in how art and activism intersect.
19. Have You Seen Me Lately: Counting Crows (Max)
This Tribeca debut, directed by Amy Scott, follows the first two albums by the band Counting Crows, focusing specifically on frontman Adam Duritz’s complicated relationship with fame, with outstanding music and aesthetics leaning heavily on a specifically 1990s look. Have You Seen Me Lately lands on HBO Max on December 18. Duritz’s struggle with fame and mental health is raw and unflinching. This is one of the most honest rock docs in years.
20. Little Richard: I Am Everything (Hulu)
The story of how a queer Black disabled child from Macon, Georgia, helped invent both rock music and rock attitude while struggling with his own sexuality proved so irresistible that two Little Richard documentaries were released this year. This one is the better of the two, digging deep into the contradictions and brilliance of one of rock’s founding fathers.
21. Summer of Soul (Disney+ / Hulu)
Questlove’s directorial debut unearths footage from the 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival, offering enlightening context into why this footage remained unseen for so long, with critics widely praising this restoration of a landmark cultural event featuring Stevie Wonder, Nina Simone, and Sly and the Family Stone. If you haven’t seen this yet, fix that immediately. It’s joyous, essential, and long overdue.
22. Bono & The Edge: A Sort of Homecoming (Apple TV+)
A film in which U2’s Bono performs on stage, tells stories about his life, and sings solo versions of various U2 songs, streaming on Apple TV and is certainly not the worst collaboration between Apple and Bono. It’s more intimate than you’d expect, and Bono’s reflections on Ireland, faith, and mortality land with unexpected weight.
23. American Symphony (Netflix)
The hugely compelling story of multi-hyphenate musician Jon Batiste, who composed his new symphony of the title, as his wife, the writer Suleika Jaouad, battled cancer, offering a one-of-a-kind explanation of the creative process. It’s devastating and uplifting in equal measure. Batiste’s grace under unimaginable pressure is something to witness.
24. Joan Baez: I Am a Noise (Hulu)
Although it played theaters in 2023, this unflinching look at the ’60s folk queen made it to streaming this year on Hulu. Baez is best known for her beautiful voice and courageous political stands, but the film presents Baez at her most vulnerable: grappling with the repercussions of her childhood even as she’s playing to adoring audiences on her farewell singing tour. It’s raw, intimate, and absolutely stunning.
25. Disco: Soundtrack of a Revolution (PBS)
This three-part series from BBC Studios and PBS is the comprehensive story of disco, not a Donna Summer and Bee Gees rehash that touches on disco’s origins in the Black and Brown gay clubs of New York, but rather an in-depth unpacking of the genre with tremendous archival footage and images, exploring the social, cultural, political and economic context of disco with equal attention paid to the different groups of people that created it and were impacted by it. Disco gets the serious treatment it always deserved.
Final Thoughts
Music documentaries keep reminding us why we fell in love with music in the first place. They pull back the curtain, sure, but they also show us the humanity behind the myth. Whether it’s Celine fighting for her voice or Luther Vandross finally getting his due, these films give us something streaming playlists never can: context, emotion, and connection.
So grab your remote, pick a documentary that speaks to you, and settle in. You might just rediscover an old favorite or find a new obsession. What do you think about this list? Tell us in the comments.
