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It Might Get Loud

PostPosted: Sun Dec 20, 2009 5:08 pm
by Peartree12249
To all you guitar players or just fans out there, if you didn't catch this documentary last summer, you might want to add it to your Christmas wish list. The DVD features Jimmy Page (my idol) Edge & Jack White. I know I'll be picking up a copy.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5sBLir8H2zM

Review from Rolling Stone September 2008

In the middle of the rock documentary It Might Get Loud, Jimmy Page picks up a Les Paul and tears into "Whole Lotta Love" while the Edge and Jack White watch, slack-jawed. "They look just like 13-year-old boys," says director Davis Guggenheim. "They were both like, 'Oh, my God, that's how he did it!' " The movie — which premiered at the Toronto Film Festival on September 5th and will get a theatrical release next year — chronicles the pan-generational trio's lives in music and the relationship that each of them has to the guitar. The high point of the film is a two-day union of the three on an L.A. soundstage, where they swap stories and jam. "It's almost like having three carpenters talk about a radial-arm saw," says White. "It's great to use this mechanical device to learn all about these other ideas that surround it."

It Might Get Loud is the brainchild of Guggenheim, who directed the Academy Award-winning An Inconvenient Truth, and Dark Knight producer Thomas Tull. The pair wanted to make a movie that avoided the Behind the Music clichés of overdoses, infighting and groupies. "No movie I've seen captures what is so transcendent about the guitar," says Tull. "Why is this particular instrument the symbol of rock?" The filmmakers made a short list of musicians to focus on, with Page, the Edge and White at the top. "We wanted players from different eras, with different styles and approaches," says Tull.

Before the summit, all three were interviewed and filmed in their hometowns. The Edge brought a camera crew to his Dublin high school, where U2 first met and played together. In London, Page reminisced about his days as a session player for hire. And White let cameras trail him for an entire day in Nashville as he wrote and recorded a song from start to finish.

When the trio finally meet, they sit down and play. "There's a scene where Edge teaches Jack and Jimmy 'I Will Follow,' " says Guggenheim. "It's very spare and punk, and Page is mystified by it. He's saying to Edge, 'Are you sure about that C?' " On the last day of shooting, the trio surprised the filmmakers with an acoustic rendition of the Band's "The Weight," with the Edge and White swapping vocals. "Thankfully," adds Tull, "we had the cameras on."

PostPosted: Sun Dec 20, 2009 6:09 pm
by Don
With all the crap music documentaries out there, this looks very cool. Definitely worthy of a purchase.

PostPosted: Mon Dec 21, 2009 2:00 am
by DrFU
Saw it in an art house theater earlier this fall. Totally loved it; will definitely be buying my own copy.

Best scene: Jimmy Page picking out notes on his guitar and explaining the development of one of Zep's monster hits; camera zooms in close on the Edge's and Jack White's faces watching him ... goosebump city.

PostPosted: Mon Dec 21, 2009 2:35 am
by Rip Rokken
Someone recommended this to me this past summer. It's out on DVD now? I'll pick up a copy today.

PostPosted: Mon Dec 21, 2009 2:44 am
by DrFU
Rip Rokken wrote:Someone recommended this to me this past summer. It's out on DVD now? I'll pick up a copy today.


Release date is Tuesday

PostPosted: Mon Dec 21, 2009 6:07 am
by Peartree12249
Got mine pre-ordered from Wal Mart.

PostPosted: Mon Dec 21, 2009 1:52 pm
by Rip Rokken
I made a trip to Best Buy to get one before I read this... but luckily it paid off. Found that Best Buy has a 50% off sale on HBO series starting today, and I'd just bought "Band of Brother"s on Blu-Ray two nights ago. I got $40+ back!

Image

PostPosted: Mon Dec 21, 2009 2:36 pm
by Peartree12249
Thanks for the tip. I'll have to go check it out.