Riding around with Neil

Young's latest Jonathan Demme-directed concert film is remarkably intimate, both on stage and off.

July 19, 2012 at 7:25PM
Neil Young in "Neil Young Journeys"
Neil Young in "Neil Young Journeys" (Leslie Plesser — ALL/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Forget Crosby, Stills and Nash and maybe even Crazy Horse. Jonathan Demme might be Neil Young's ultimate collaborator.

The third tête-a-tête between the "Philadelphia" filmmaker and the "Ohio" classic rocker, "Neil Young Journeys" opens with Neil driving around "a town in north Ontario," the home of his early youth. We're riding with him in the back seat of a 1956 Crown Victoria that sounds like the rumble from an Iron Range mine.

The real ride, however, begins a few minutes later when the rock legend plugs in his similarly bulky and even more guttural Gretsch guitar with us seated right at his feet. Buckle up and hold on.

Filmed around the Toronto finale of his 2010-11 solo tour -- Twin Cities fans saw a similar gig at Northrop Auditorium -- "Journeys" is one of the most close-up concert films of all time. Not only are the scenes at Young's childhood haunts remarkably intimate (and often funny), but there are moments on stage when you can see the singer's dental work or guess how many hours it had been since his last shave. (Yeah, not so funny.)

For casual Young fans, he plays a handful of The Hits, including solo versions of "Ohio," "Down by the River," "Hey Hey My My" and an organ-pumping "After the Gold Rush." For the treasure seekers, there are powerful versions of tracks from the 2010 Daniel Lanois-produced "Le Noise" album plus several surprises, including the old nugget "I Believe in You" and a touching, still-unreleased piano ballad, "Leia." The setting of the show, Toronto's historic Massey Hall, is also something for music fans to geek out over. Young recently issued a 1971 album recorded there.

As with the last Young-Demme movie, 2006's "Heart of Gold," this one is haunted by a recent death (Young's longtime pedal-steel whiz Ben Keith) and carries a somber, sentimental undertone. Adding to that vibe is a mini-documentary on the four Kent State shooting victims, included to set up "Ohio" -- further proof that Young, 66, is not one to put an expiration date on a cause.

Best of all, the song finds Young still very much in his prime. His voice stands up as strong and distinctive as that Crown Vic, and his guitar playing is more deeply felt than any crash or bang served up in those Spider-Man or Batman movies. Dare it be said, "Journeys" has the coolest superhero on screen this summer.

Chris Riemenschneider • 612-673-4658 Twitter: @ChrisRstrib

about the writer

about the writer

Chris Riemenschneider

Critic / Reporter

Chris Riemenschneider has been covering the Twin Cities music scene since 2001, long enough for Prince to shout him out during "Play That Funky Music (White Boy)." The St. Paul native authored the book "First Avenue: Minnesota's Mainroom" and previously worked as a music critic at the Austin American-Statesman in Texas.

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