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Down from the Mountain Streaming.
Movie Title: Down from the Mountain Down from the Mountain is available for streaming or downloading. |
This movie, share stage reveal and section local color with a splendid bit of nostalgia thrown in, is breathtaking, riveting, though-provoking, transcendent. It begins with a night tour of Nashville’s spellbinding places; from the limo window we recognize Tootsie’s, the Ryman Auditorium, Second Avenue, Lower Broadway. We allotment our hump with Ralph Stanley, who has “approach down from the mountain.” We exhaust time backstage at the Ryman while the performers are waiting their turns, and eavesdrop on John Hartford as he spins a record about wanting to be a librarian. We listen to a couple of blues players talk about their work and behold that Emmylou Harris is a baseball fan. The reveal itself is country at its best. Rock and roll doesn’t exhibit its face; there are no gyrations or great hats or shrill voices. Impartial country, with memories of the Carter Family, Jimmie Rodgers, and a plethora of mature time musicians who sang of hard times and death and endurance. We will always remember Emmylou Harris’s sweet, lawful express, Allison Krause’s melodic outpouring, and Gillian Welch’s glowing harmony. We’ll remember the Peasall sisters and the Fairfield Four and Ralph Stanley; but most of all, we’ll remember the magic moment when John Hartford began to mutter “Broad Rock Candy Mountain.” It was one of his last performances before he succumbed to cancer, but his speak was precise and strong, and his hands distinct on the violin. This was ragged time music as it should be, and even the newer songs sounded customary. It reminds us of how far new country music has strayed from its roots, and how easy and fine it is to go succor to them again.
I wasn’t distinct that a documentary about bluegrass music was going to be something that a) I would bask in, b) something I would gain compelling or c) something that would turn me onto an position of music and performances enough to earn me rethink my outmoded country snobbishness. “Down from the Mountain” made me a convert on all the above bases and more. This documentary-style film about the music and artists who comprise the soundtrack for “Oh, Brother, Where art Thou? ” include the sizable talents of Emmylou Harris, Alison Krauss and Gillian Welch. These women have ways of lovingly massaging a ballad until it truly has a life of it’s absorb. The soulful words and melodies of family artists like the Whites, and the Cox family are wonderfully done, as are the younger performers who secure to ramp up the tempo for their rendition of “Highways and the Hedges”. Then there’s the wonderfully dry-witted John Hartford, who takes a few moments aside from his emcee responsibilities to give a toe-tapping rendition of “Large Rock Candy Mountain”. The film takes you for a backstage pass (OK, is Emmylou Harris THAT enormous of a baseball fan!) AND a front row performance in the acoustically unbelievable Ryman Theatre. Through a mix of gospel, bluegrass, blues and country, the viewer gets a genuine treat of hearing and seeing what was the musical underpinning for the Coen brother’s blockbuster film. You might very well meet some unique musical artists in this video. I did. They seem to enjoy a different countenance from other contemporary artists, demonstrating a solid reliance on song style, harmonies, acoustics, and ultimately bringing “everything out but the kitchen sink” in their delivery, and that was it for me. The words are familiar and the songbirds beckon, approach smile, sob, clap your hands, or voice, “Hallelujah!”, mountain life is exquisite obedient and your journey’s fair beginning.
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