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Neil Young
(PG, 103 minutes) |
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In March 2005, Neil Young was
diagnosed with a brain aneurysm. Four days before he was
scheduled for a lifesaving operation, he headed to Nashville,
where he wrote and recorded the country folk album PRAIRIE
WIND with old friends and family members. After the successful
operation and recovery period, he returned to Nashville that
August to play at the famed Ryman Auditorium, once again
gathering together friends and family for this special
performance. He also brought along Oscar-winning director
Jonathan Demme, who in addition to making such hits as THE
SILENCE OF THE LAMBS and PHILADELPHIA has made such successful
concert films as STOP MAKING SENSE (with the Talking Heads)
and STOREFRONT HITCHCOCK (with Robyn Hitchcock), as well as
videos for the Pretenders and Bruce Springsteen. NEIL YOUNG:
HEART OF GOLD begins with brief interviews with many of the
participants, but then it's all about the music. Supported by
his wife, Pegi, country star Emmylou Harris, the Nashville
String Machine, the Memphis Horns, the Fisk University Jubilee
Singers, and musicians Ben Keith, Spooner Oldham, Rick Rosas,
Grant Boatwright, and others, Young leads an ever-changing
collection of musicians through nine of the ten songs from the
remarkable PRAIRIE WIND, an album that poignantly deals with
love and loss, life and death. Young even gets reflective at
the show, telling moving stories from his past in between
playing guitar, harmonica, piano, and banjo. He also delights
the crowd with a long set of encores of past acoustic hits,
going through his vast repertoire to find memorable songs that
examine life and death as well, including "The Needle and the
Damage Done," "Old Man," "Comes a Time," and Ian Tyson's "Four
Strong Winds." NEIL YOUNG: HEART OF GOLD is an extraordinary
document of one of the world's greatest songwriters staring
death in the face--and letting the music save him.
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