FORUM › Forums › Other Topics › Singers and Songwriters › NEIL!
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February 4, 2010 at 11:05 pm #33251LafayetteParticipant
From the MusiCares concert, with snippets of performances from the evening as well as comments from Neil. Unfortunately, nothing involving Lu.
February 5, 2010 at 1:51 am #33252tonygKeymasterThere is a part 2 to that video. Lu shows up around the 2 minute mark. Not singing tho.
February 5, 2010 at 3:23 am #33253LWjettaParticipantThanks for posting this.
Good to see Crosby,Stills and Nash there.
lwjFebruary 7, 2010 at 4:41 am #33254LafayetteParticipantThanks, tonyg for the heads up on part 2. A soundbyte of Lu, Patty, and EmmyLou would have been even better!
March 1, 2010 at 2:14 pm #33255LWjettaParticipantNeil sang “Long May You Run” at the Olympics closing ceremonies last night.
Seems appropriate since his father, Scott wrote books on hockey.
Great performance by both Team Canada and Team USA.http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joe-lapointe/olympic-hockey-for-crosby_b_480074.html
And here’s a short clip from last night.http://www.mahalo.com/neil-young-olympics
lwjMarch 24, 2010 at 2:10 pm #33256LafayetteParticipantNeil Young is doing a handful of acoustic dates, including 2 at Ryman Auditorium! WOW!
http://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2010/03/neil-young-announces-short-southern-tour.html
Neil Young will play a short batch of acoustic shows in the Southeast beginning in May. These shows—Young’s first southern dates in nearly 10 years—will see the legendary rocker playing solo in a theater setting. He’ll treat audiences to both classic songs from his vast catalog as well as new tracks. Tickets for the Twisted Road Tour go on sale this Saturday, March 27. Bert Jansch opens all shows.
May
26 – Louisville, Ky. @ Palace Theatre
29 – Atlanta, Ga. @ Fox Theatre
30 – Spartanburg, S.C. @ Memorial AuditoriumJune
1 – Nashville, Tenn. @ Ryman Auditorium
2 – Nashville, Tenn. @ Ryman Auditoriumlwj…IThe beginning of that U.S. road trip?
March 24, 2010 at 2:45 pm #33257tonygKeymasterI’m hoping some west coast dates will appear. I would love to see Bert Jansch.
March 24, 2010 at 4:20 pm #33258LWjettaParticipant@Lafayette wrote:
Neil Young is doing a handful of acoustic dates, including 2 at Ryman Auditorium! WOW!
June
1 – Nashville, Tenn. @ Ryman Auditorium
2 – Nashville, Tenn. @ Ryman Auditoriumlwj…IThe beginning of that U.S. road trip?
I can easily change my itinerary to go to Nashville, but I bet the ticket prices will be unreal.
I’ve only seen NEIL live once-Toronto in December, 2008 for $145.00 + fees. It was worth it.(20,000 seat venue sold out)
As far as the Ryman goes , if you haven’t already, buy NEIL’S Heart of Gold 2 disc DVD from 2006 filmed there. It features Emmylou Harris and on the bonus disc #2 you can see NEIL’s performance from 1971 on the Johnny Cash Show.I’ve got my car gassed up for a short “road trip” tonight to see one of my Top 5-Serena Ryder.
I think I would scrub Austin on my tentative itinerary because of the distance.
lwjMarch 25, 2010 at 3:54 am #33259LafayetteParticipantYou are so right lwj. Ticket prices are outrageous. I’ll wait and see him at Farm Aid.
$245 high end, $125, and $85 respectively.
http://www.louisvillepalace.com/
I will check out his opening act, tonyg.
March 26, 2010 at 12:08 pm #33260LWjettaParticipantTickets for the Ryman Auditorium go on sale tomorrow at $127. & $92 + ?
See the link, box office sales will be determined by lottery.
People must stand in line no earlier than one hour before tickets go on sale, no camping and leave no garbage.
Click for details.
Getting into a concert now seems so complex.
Here is the Ryman link for NEIL.http://www.ryman.com/
lwj
p.s. I don’t think I’ll fly down to Nashville tonight to stand in line.March 26, 2010 at 2:19 pm #33261LafayetteParticipant@LWjetta wrote:
Tickets for the Ryman Auditorium go on sale tomorrow at $127. & $92 + ?
See the link, box office sales will be determined by lottery.
People must stand in line no earlier than one hour before tickets go on sale, no camping and leave no garbage.
Click for details.
Getting into a concert now seems so complex.
Here is the Ryman link for NEIL.http://www.ryman.com/
lwj
p.s. I don’t think I’ll fly down to Nashville tonight to stand in line.WOW. I should have persevered and looked further. I was disappointed in those ticket prices after only going to Louisville site.
Not going to believe this one, but I am going to Nashville today ❗ to see Amos tonight! I will be able to line up to get in lottery. Of course, theoretically, this will end up costing more with gas and hotel. 😕 over just going to Louisville, where I wouldn’t have to stay overnight.
March 26, 2010 at 4:59 pm #33262LWjettaParticipant@Lafayette wrote:
Not going to believe this one, but I am going to Nashville today to see Amos tonight! I will be able to line up to get in lottery.
Lucky you to see Mr. Lee and Holly Williams.
Lafayette, you should have no trouble finding the Mercy Lounge-It’s just off Lafayette St.
Enjoy the show and I hope you succeed tomorrow getting tickets for NEIL.
lwjMarch 31, 2010 at 3:28 pm #33263LeftyParticipantHello, Friends. For your reading pleasure… 🙂
Brave New World Dept.
Neil Young Skype Show
by Nick Paumgarten
The New Yorker – April 5, 2010Rock Music SCENE: A conference room in the theatre district. Jonathan Demme, a filmmaker, is seated at a long table, facing a laptop. He is wearing an Argyle sweater and bluejeans. On the laptop’s screen is a pixellated moving image of Neil Young, who is wearing a white panama hat and a loose white button-down shirt. He and Demme are communicating via Skype. Young seems bemused, not only in the way he usually does but also in the way that inexperienced users of Skype often do in the opening moments of a call.
NEIL YOUNG: Can you hear me? Yo, yo!
JONATHAN DEMME: I can see you. Can you see us, buddy?
N.Y.: Hello?
J.D.: Hello, hello.
N.Y.: I can’t see you guys.
J.D.: Why not?
N.Y.: I don’t know.
J.D.: You’re outdoors.
(Young’s expression brightens. He waves at the screen. Contact.)
N.Y.: You guys are very silhouetted. It’s very spooky.
J.D.: Dude, you look good. What the heck. Where are you?
N.Y.: I’m right here.
J.D.: Is there a pool right over your right shoulder?
N.Y.: A pool?
J.D.: A swimming pool. Because it looks like there oughta be one there.
N.Y.: Well, it is pretty nice here in California. (Young is at home, on his ranch, south of San Francisco.) Actually, I’m in one of my play areas. Where my computer is. And my trains are back there. (In the background, there is a covered pavilion. Behind Young are mounds made of what appears to be driftwood.) Those are a bunch of mountains. It’s a mountain range. If I turn some lights on, you might be able to see it. I’ll make an adjustment. (Young gets up, strolls into the background, and flips a switch. Nothing changes. But the viewer realizes, while waiting for Young to shuffle back to his laptop, that the driftwood mounds are train-set mountains. The background is a giant model-train set.) So, whatchou guys doing?
J.D.: Well, we’re on the tenth floor of 311 West Forty-third Street. That’s where we’re rehearsing this Beth Henley play that I’m directing. We’re on a twenty-minute break.
(A discussion ensues—this Skype chat has been condensed for the benefit of the audience—about “Neil Young Trunk Show,” a film that Demme has just released, which documents a concert that Young and his band gave two years ago, near Philadelphia. It is Demme’s second Neil Young concert film.)
N.Y.: The picture is Jonathan’s. Once again, he’s done what he does, and all of a sudden there it is. He’s made an interesting document of the show, but there’s more to it than just the show, apparently. There’s something else in there, and I love it. (He bobs back and forth, only occasionally glancing up. He picks at bits of lint on his shirt and pants, as one might during a regular phone call.)
J.D.: Neil, you bring a little extra to the party—you trust the camera. You know that the camera loves you, and you’re so at ease with it. You know how to play it.
N.Y.: When you’re there, Jon, and your crew is there, I don’t worry about anything. I just forget about it. I’m going, “I don’t know if they’re on my nose hairs or my butt, and I don’t give a shit, to tell you the truth, because I know they’re professional, and it’ll look beautiful.” (Young sits up straighter and leers at the screen.) It wasn’t an entirely great performance. It was a struggle at times. The struggle to get the beat right on “No Hidden Path” was a long one, and so finally we had to settle for playing it differently. I played it faster than I normally do. Not that it would’ve been longer if I’d played it at the right tempo, but . . . (His performance of “No Hidden Path,” a Hendrixy guitar extravaganza, takes up twenty minutes of the eighty-two-minute film.) That’s the test, the audience test. “How long are these guys gonna play?” It doesn’t matter how long it is, because it’s only convention that dictates how long a song should be. We don’t have to play by those rules. We aren’t competing in that arena. We just play. It goes on for a long time. It’s like jazz, or fusion. I don’t know what the hell it is. It’s what we do, and the older we get the more we do it.
(In the film, a camera mounted on the drums captures Young as he plays the last, distorted notes of a long jam in “No Hidden Path.” Behind him, in the front row, members of the audience look as though they had been robbed of their belongings in the main plaza of a foreign city. Demme has said in the past that he believes no concert film should ever include shots of the audience.)
J.D.: As long as there is a musician in the foreground, it’s O.K. to show the audience.
N.Y.: Yeah, but generally we hate the fucking audience. They disturb the whole thing. (On the laptop screen, Young waves his arms back and forth in the air, in the manner of an enthusiastic concertgoer.) They’ve got people who do that. They have people who wave their hands back and forth in the background. That’s what they do. It doesn’t matter what the music is. It’s a way to make a living, I guess. (Demme looks up at the clock and exchanges a glance with an assistant.) I remember we did a tour, and they had these cranes out in the audience, flying around, casting cones of light down on the audience, so that everyone in the audience had these halos on their heads. I walked out onstage and said to myself, “This is fucked up. I might not even play. This is so wrong.” All night long I was thinking, Why do I have to see people? I’ve never seen them before. I hate looking at them.
(Young faces the camera—eye contact, of a kind. On the laptop, his image breaks apart, and his voice burbles. There is something warm and archaic about Skype’s flaws. A Skype call can feel like a telegram. “It’s so fragile,” Demme says. “It’s sweet.” )
J.D.: Neil, I’d better leave, because Beth Henley and four wonderful actresses are waiting for me downstairs.
N.Y.: You always have a way of doing that. You have four wonderful actresses waiting for you downstairs. That’s tough. Get down there, Jonathan.
J.D.: It’s nice being here with you, even like this, Neil.
N.Y.: Take care.
J.D.: Aloha.
N.Y.: Love you.
J.D.: Love you, man.
N.Y.: Yep.
(The panama hat fills the screen, and then disappears.) ♦
March 31, 2010 at 3:55 pm #33264LWjettaParticipant@Lefty wrote:
Hello, Friends. For your reading pleasure…
Hey Lefty welcome back.( Erika W. was wondering where you have been )
Glad you posted this, the movie is now playing in Canada-ehHere is the movie trailer.
http://www.trunkshowmovie.com/
lwjMarch 31, 2010 at 4:35 pm #33265tntracyParticipantLefty! ¿Qué pasa? 😀
Tom
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