If anyone still needs to be persuaded to believe that the 1960s was the greatest era for popular music, the documentary "Echo in the Canyon" will provide further evidence. It was a time of such diversity that groups like the Doors and the Rolling Stones could share the top of the charts with Frank Sinatra. Writer/director Andrew Slater traces the emergence of the electronic folk/rock scene that came to life in L.A.'s Laurel Canyon area during the years 1965-1967 when many aspiring young singers and songwriters emigrated to there and inspired each other to create a new sound that transfixed America. Much has been written about Elvis Presley defining rock 'n roll in the 1950s and how the Beatles and other British Invasion bands took the nation by storm in the 1960s. But the highly influential folk/rock scene has rarely been analyzed with the same intensity, despite the influence of the talents that emerged from it. Slater's film finally does justice to this incredible explosion of talent. The film is a patchwork of various interviews that somehow blend together to make a coherent central point: that the artists involved in the folk/rock scene knew they were creating something special. In the film, they discuss how they drew from each other's strengths beginning with the Byrds electronic hit version of Pete Seeger's "Turn! Turn! Turn!". They were competitors on one level, but colleagues on another. When one group or singer came up with a hit, it inspired their friends to redouble their own efforts, occasionally subliminally stealing some aspects of others' songs for themselves.
Contemporary folk rocker Jakob Dylan, son of you-know-who, conducts the interviews as we follow him driving around various Laurel Canyon locations that were central to the movement in the 1960s. Dylan, like his legendary father, wears a somber expression throughout but he does a fine job of eliciting interesting observations from such icons as David Crosby, Michelle Phillips, Ringo Starr, Graham Nash, John Sebastian, Stephen Stills, Roger McGuinn, Jackson Brown, Tom Petty (his last filmed interview), Eric Clapton and legendary music producer Lou Adler. Michelle Phillips discusses her sexually liberated lifestyle while in the Mamas and the Papas and recalls how her husband John, founder of the group, discovered she was having an affair with fellow band member Denny Doherty. Out of frustration, he wrote their hit song "Go Where You Wanna Go" to reflect his wife's aversion to monogamy. (Not mentioned was the revelation in later years that John had been alleged to have carried on an incestuous relationship with his daughter.) Ringo Starr recalls how the Beatles were so impressed with the Beach Boys' "Pet Sounds" album that it inspired them to make "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" and David Crosby admits the real reason his friends and colleagues kicked him out of the Byrds was "because I was an asshole." Dylan even coaxes the often reclusive Brian Wilson out of hibernation for some brief, upbeat comments about the glory days of the Beach Boys.
The film shows Jakob Dylan and and his contemporaries (including Fiona Apple, Beck and Nora Jones) performing spirited and reverent cover versions of some of these artist's greatest hits, intermingled with priceless vintage film footage of the original groups playing them. There are also extensive clips from director Jacques Demy's 1969 feature film "Model Shop" that shows star Gary Lockwood in footage in which he is seen in many of the locales where the great folk/rock music was created.
The Blu-ray from Greenwich Entertainment looks great but unfortunately is bare-bones in terms of bonus extras. However, the film is a priceless time capsule of a wonderful era in popular music that we're not likely to experience again any time soon.
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