The Jerusalem Post

Neil Young scales a modest ‘Mountainto­p’

- • BY CHRIS WILLMAN

LOS ANGELES (Variety.com/ Reuters) – If you ever wished you could be a fly on the wall at a Neil Young recording session, his new film Mountainto­p may put that desire to the test. Or at least it’ll severely try the patience of any unsuspecti­ng dates who get dragged along by Young fanatics to the movie’s one night in North American theaters October 22, as they realize, possibly to their horror, that the entire film is going to consist of borderline found footage picked up by stationary cameras in a recording studio where Young and his band Crazy Horse are cutting a new album.

Relationsh­ips have broken up under far less stress than the strain that Mountainto­p will put on mixed couples, where only one partner may think hearing Young barking at his bandmates and engineers over the audibility of their monitor mixes counts as a fun night out at the movies.

It’s a small subset even of the Young faithful, then, that will enjoy Mountainto­p. But speaking as part of that very subset – and someone who would never, ever subject a loved one to an experience quite this micro-targeted toward the mega-fan – I’d say that Mountainto­p provides a valuable service in capturing what it’s like to be in a recording studio at length, with all the bickering and tiny experiment­s and small eureka moments that entails, better than any other music doc ever has.

It may be useful to think of this less as a documentar­y, anyway, than as part of another movie tradition. Young and his group have set up at a studio built into a large home high in the Rocky Mountains, where we get only the most fleeting glimpses of the beauty outside the creative claustroph­obia indoors before they get to put footprints in the snow again.

Young is working again under his longstandi­ng filmmaking pseudonym “Bernard Shakey,” a nom de plume that all but advertises that we should never expect what you’d call a steady directoria­l hand at the helm. In the ultra-verite Mountainto­p, “Shakey” assumes filmgoers knows why they’re there, so he doesn’t include any on-screen identifyin­g credits or have anyone mention that this is the first album he’s recorded with Crazy Horse in seven years (and first since old comrade Nils Lofgren signed on as a key new member). The title of the album doesn’t even get a mention (it’s Colorado, and it came out Friday). What do voyeuristi­c flies need with chyrons or backstory, right?

WITH NO interviews or other supplement­ary footage, the film just offers glimpses of the 10 new songs being recorded, one at a time, in what would seem to be a compressed period at the Studio in the Clouds, near Telluride. Oxygen tubes have been brought in to assist the musicians and engineers – and no other apparent substances, although drummer Ralph Molina is seen angrily begging, apparently in vain, for a joint.

None of the songs are played through exactly in their entirety, as the live sessions frequently stop or the film cuts to different audio in the control room. Tensions run quite high at times, with Young complainin­g, “I love singing into a wet sock,” or telling a band member caught unawares going into a fresh take that “maybe you should practice that one for a few minutes,” or kvetching about “one of the worst f***ing monitor systems known to man.”

Co-producer John Hanlon – whose ongoing bout with poison oak comprises the closest thing the film has to a subplot

– says that the Colorado compound is “the most f **** d up studio I’ve ever worked in in my f **** g life” and declares he’s about to leave the project. Aware that he’s been on camera the whole time, he demands the last half-hour of footage be erased which, amusingly, of course, it was not. Young comes off as testy under pressure, to say the least, but a certain level of crotchety-ness is part of the brand, so hardcore fans may love every epithet that slips from his lips, in-between the moments where he’s singing sweet odes to Mother Nature. To say that this inside of a peek into the recording process is for specialize­d tastes risks being an understate­ment. But Mountainto­p, if nothing else, may be about to become every oft-beleaguere­d producer or recording engineer’s favorite cult movie. For the rest of us, it offers a lot of small pleasures, too, once you accept its hemmed-in setting and settle into its rhythms.

When Young likes what is happening around him in the studio, he lights up with some very Neil aphorisms, like “I like doing it trashy because it’s a fine song” and “It doesn’t have to be good; it’s going to be great.” In the end, the film turns out be a testament to how collaborat­ion doesn’t have to be completely touchyfeel­y to work out just fine. Some flies on the wall will have buzzed off to an adjacent theater in the multiplex before Young and company get through all 10 songs, but to the survivors go the epic jam moments and guitar-hero solo squalls.

 ?? (Reuters/Variety) ?? NEIL YOUNG’S ‘Mountainto­p.’
(Reuters/Variety) NEIL YOUNG’S ‘Mountainto­p.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel