Summaries

A look at the roots of the historic music scene in L.A.'s Laurel Canyon featuring the music of iconic groups such as The Byrds, The Beach Boys, Buffalo Springfield, and The Mamas and the Papas.

In the mid-1960s, a folk rock music scene emerged in Laurel Canyon with many musical artists having moved into the neighborhood and collaborated with each other, both casually and formally. This documentary is one half of project celebrating this music scene on its fiftieth anniversary, with host Jakob Dylan speaking to many of those musicians about how the scene and the specific bands evolved. The other half is a concert of this 1960s Laurel Canyon music performed by Dylan and some of his folk rock contemporaries.—Huggo

Details

Keywords
  • california
  • rock star
  • rock music
  • rock history
  • folk rock
Genres
  • Music
  • Documentary
Release date Jun 6, 2019
Motion Picture Rating (MPA) PG-13
Countries of origin United States
Language English
Filming locations Los Angeles, California, USA
Production companies Mirror Films

Box office

Gross US & Canada $3355324
Opening weekend US & Canada $117651
Gross worldwide $3355324

Tech specs

Runtime 1h 22m
Color Color
Aspect ratio 1.85 : 1

Synopsis

In the summer of 1965 the most popular song in America was the debut single by The Byrds. With their mushroom haircuts, 3-part harmonies, and jangly electric 12-string sound, they were to be America's answer to The Beatles. They weren't. Instead, they invented folk rock and attracted a generation of recording artists to Los Angeles.

Echo In The Canyon is a look back at the influence and the music of those artists (The Byrds, The Mamas & the Papas, Buffalo Springfield, The Beach Boys) from Southern California's age of innocence (1965 - 1967); the beginnings of Los Angeles' Laurel Canyon music scene, and how the echo of these artist's creations reverberated between each other and ultimately across to London (where it alters the course of The Beatles themselves.)

The songs from that era provide an entry point as Jakob Dylan and a new generation of artists whose own body of work reflect the echoes of that pivotal time (Beck, Fiona Apple, Norah Jones, Regina Spektor, Cat Power and others), interpret and perform the songs paying homage to, and in many cases in front of, its authors.

Dylan journeys to those who wrote the songs and discovers why they were written and what life was like in Los Angeles' Laurel Canyon in the years before psychedelia and the birth of the singer/songwriter era. He uncovers never before heard personal details behind the recordings and those who made them popular.

Performing and or speaking are Tom Petty, Brian Wilson, Eric Clapton, Ringo Starr, Stephen Stills, Roger McGuinn, Michelle Phillips, David Crosby, Graham Nash, Jackson Browne, John Sebastian, and Lou Adler.

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