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I've watched about 75% of it, and honestly the show is a bit frustrating. It's all over the place. The conversations with the band are incredible, but there aren't enough of them and the editing seems more like filling time than story telling. It's all "good"....but it feels more like high end music videos cobbled together than documentary to me.
Location: Really deep in the heart of South California Gender:
Posted:
Oct 20, 2020 - 3:59pm
ScottFromWyoming wrote:
sirdroseph wrote:
If you liked that, check this out. I am a documentary freak to say the least especially music documentaries and with the advent of streaming stations the supply is endless. This one stands out though, it is so well done:
Yep, and Crosby comes off as the most level-headed of the bunch (prize for the opposite end, as always, goes to Jim McGuinn). The live/tribute performances were really good, too.
Yep. One of my favorites so far. And, AND a humble David Crosby! Lots of Byrds...how can it be bad?
If you liked that, check this out. I am a documentary freak to say the least especially music documentaries and with the advent of streaming stations the supply is endless. This one stands out though, it is so well done:
(Echo in the Canyon Trailer)
Yep, and Crosby comes off as the most level-headed of the bunch (prize for the opposite end, as always, goes to Jim McGuinn). The live/tribute performances were really good, too.
I've got to check this out. I heard passing references to Laurel Canyon as a musicians' haven over the years and then saw bits of the area while watching episodes of "Californiacation." It looked and sounded serenely beautiful.
But this comment makes me want to track the movie down:
"Yep, and Crosby comes off as the most level-headed of the bunch (prize for the opposite end, as always, goes to Jim McGuinn)."
I'm not doubting you but when David Crosby is the most level-headed person in a group of people, there has to be a serious problem. That guy ingested a pharmacy of drugs in his time. At one point in the 80s it seemed like he was getting arrested every other week. And he was a socially destructive person. There's a trailer for the film about Crosby's life where he says something like "All the guys I made music withâall of 'emâwon't even talk to me."
It's definitely surprising that he has such clear-eyed memories of who was doing what with whom. Probably aided by reading books and watching documentaries, but he sounds good now. McGuinn has always come off as addled, to me, even in 60s interviews from before the drugs could be wholly responsible.
If you liked that, check this out. I am a documentary freak to say the least especially music documentaries and with the advent of streaming stations the supply is endless. This one stands out though, it is so well done:
(Echo in the Canyon Trailer)
Yep, and Crosby comes off as the most level-headed of the bunch (prize for the opposite end, as always, goes to Jim McGuinn). The live/tribute performances were really good, too.
I've got to check this out. I heard passing references to Laurel Canyon as a musicians' haven over the years and then saw bits of the area while watching episodes of "Californiacation." It looked and sounded serenely beautiful.
But this comment makes me want to track the movie down:
"Yep, and Crosby comes off as the most level-headed of the bunch (prize for the opposite end, as always, goes to Jim McGuinn)."
I'm not doubting you but when David Crosby is the most level-headed person in a group of people, there has to be a serious problem. That guy ingested a pharmacy of drugs in his time. At one point in the 80s it seemed like he was getting arrested every other week. And he was a socially destructive person. There's a trailer for the film about Crosby's life where he says something like "All the guys I made music with—all of 'em—won't even talk to me."
Location: At the dude ranch / above the sea Gender:
Posted:
Oct 19, 2020 - 7:25pm
sirdroseph wrote:
he had his finger on the pulse of his existence.
From that perspective, it's a sad film. He was driven by something to write constantly, almost until he was physically unable. Neglected his kids, his marriage. Even at the end he felt like he hadn't reached a finishing point, so much undun. Some pride in what he'd accomplished, but so miserable because of the drive.