'Sound City' Documentary: Dave Grohl's Labour Of Love, And Why Paul McCartney Made The Cut

'Sound City' Documentary: Dave Grohl's Labour of Love

If you need to gather a bunch of A-list musical luminaries together to make a documentary film AND record a one-off album, it probably helps to be well-connected, well-respected and very well-liked. Basically, it really helps if you're Dave Grohl.

And this is exactly what the Nirvana and Foo Fighters rock legend did, for his personal tribute - not to a person, a band, or even a city sound, but to a studio, the 'Sound City' of the title, specifically one particular mixing desk at the centre of it all, the fabled Neve 8028 analog mixing console.

The Neve mixing desk takes its place in history, thanks to Dave Grohl's Herculean efforts

This may sound like an indulgence on Grohl's part, but the result is a delight for any fan of rock music, student of pop culture history, or just anyone who likes a wander down memory lane, particularly one peppered by such a variety of interesting faces and anecdotes.

Dave Grohl's documentary 'Sound City' traces the history of the LA studio housed in an unprepossessing car park in the Van Nuys area, that played host to many of the sounds defining three decades of rock. The roll call of musicians stepping across the threshold into the dusty, dirty, unkempt surroundings is pretty impressive - amongst them Tom Petty, Lindsay Buckingham, Rick Springfield, Neil Young, Stevie Nicks - many of whom in the documentary remember their time fondly and with candour.

We see the roller coaster journey the studio went on - the highs of the seventies, the deep lows of the eighties, before its Renaissance occurred when a certain Seattle band lobbed up to record 'Nevermind' - and so ignited a fresh rush of bookings that brought the studio unique global kudos, and 20 years more time.

The film does not skirt over the challenges faced by Sound City, instead it uses them as a framework for a thorough discussion of where music's gone - to the despair of many - over the last 20 years, specifically with the use of technology, and a million digital would-be hitmakers.

Dave Grohl was probably the one person who could pull this off

But if many purists lament the passing of the classical sound in favour of the home-recording generation, Grohl is not among them. Telling a story in London at a packed screening of the film, about his daughter's first discovery of the joys of a record-player, he waxed lyrical about why this gives him hope for an everlasting pursuit...

"The world changes. You're not going to interfere with progress, and you cant give up hope. But we'll still be people, we're not robots. So that same experience, as impractical as it may seem by today's standards, is an entirely human experience, and she has it the same today as was being had 50 years ago. I think that'll happen forever. It's about connecting emotionally to music. As long as there are still people with instruments in your face singing about something entirely real that you connect to, well then... we're fine."

The third act in the documentary sees Grohl bring together some of his favourite musicians (I can't tell you how or why without spoiling it) for a one-off tribute album, and sharp-eyed viewers will spot the ever-youthful Paul McCartney joining in for what turned out to be an afternoon's session. Why did Grohl want to include the former Beatle who, unlike the others, wasn't part of Sound City's history?

"If I’m trying to tell the story from a personal perspective, he’s a huge part of my life, and this story," explained Grohl in London.

"It might not make immediate sense, but the Neve and Sound City are the reason I'm here, and the Beatles are the reason I'm a musician, so it felt right to bring them together."

Both the ‘Sound City’ DVD/ Blu ray and the album ‘Sound City – Real to Reel’ are released 11 March 2013. Watch the trailer to the film below...

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