- The unforgettable life and music of pioneering legend Chuck Berry are celebrated in this landmark feature film, capturing a once-in-a-lifetime gathering of rock and roll’s finest! In 1986, Keith Richards invited a roster of musicians to honor Berry for an evening of music to commemorate his 60th birthday, including performances by Eric Clapton, Robert Cray, Linda Rondstadt, Etta James and Juli
Description
The unforgettable life and music of pioneering legend Chuck Berry are celebrated in this landmark feature film, capturing a once-in-a-lifetime gathering of rock and roll’s finest! In 1986, Keith Richards invited a roster of musicians to honor Berry for an evening of music to commemorate his 60th birthday, including performances by Eric Clapton, Robert Cray, Linda Rondstadt, Etta James and Julian Lennon, along with footage of an unforgettable duet by Chuck and John Lennon! Also featuring interviews with many of the original creators of rock and roll: Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard, Roy Orbison, Bo Diddley, The Everly Bros, and Willy Dixon. This dynamite crowd pleaser from director Taylor Hackford (Ray) will keep your toes tapping and your soul rocking all night long! ROCKING EXTRAS! 54 minutes of never-before-seen Chuck Berry rehearsals in DTS and 5.1 audio, featuring Keith Richards, Eric Clapton, Johnnie Johnson, Chuck Lavell and Etta James! “Witness to History,” featuring Little Richard, Bo Diddley and Chuck Berry together for the first time; “The Burnt Scrapbook,” with Chuck Berry and Robbie Robertson revealing the remains of Chuck’s collection of musical memories; “Chuckisms,” a collection of classic Chuck Berry remarks; “Witness to History 2,” an amazing 3-and-a-half hour look at the birth of rock music with Jerry Lee Lewis, Bo Diddley, the Everly Brothers, Roy Orbison and more!Amazon.com
Two distinct portraits of Chuck Berry emerge in this lavish four-disc set built around Hail! Hail! Rock n’ Roll, director Taylor Hackford’s 1986 documentary/concert film. On one side there’s the Berry who wrote a catalogue’s worth of genre-defining songs (“Maybellene,” “Johnny B. Goode,” “Roll Over Beethoven,” and so many others), all of them filled with wit, delightful stories, and poetry. He’s also the guitarist who virtually patented many of rock’s seminal licks, and the showman who attracted some top musicians to celebrate his 60th birthday with a concert in St. Louis, his hometown. On the other hand, there’s the Berry who, in the course of the film as well as the accompanying bonus material, emerges as a prickly cheapskate who drove the filmmakers and musicians nuts with his absurd demands and unpredictable behavior. Together they make a fascinating look at the guy who justifiably calls himself “the father of rock ‘n’ roll.”
Hackford’s original film, now issued with a crisp, anamorphic transfer and digital sound, occupies Disc One. A parade of classics are heard during the climactic concert, performed by Berry and a superb band (led by Keith Richards and featuring guitarist Robert Cray and Johnny Johnson, Berry’s original pianist, among others), with guest shots by Eric Clapton (smoking on the slow blues “Wee Wee Hours”), Etta James, Linda Ronstadt, and Julian Lennon (whose dad was an unabashed Berry fan). There are revealing offstage glimpses, too, like Berry confessing that he only took up music full-time because there was more money in it than in housepainting, or a weary, wasted Richards admitting that “I was mad to take the gig” but gamely standing up to his idol at every turn (watch for a memorable moment during the very first song of the concert, when Chuck attempts to change key in mid-tune and Keith sternly shakes him off).
The three discs of bonus features add a lot more to the portrait. Much of it is terrific: A nostalgic Berry poring over his scrapbook with Robbie Robertson of the Band; some lengthy rehearsal jams with Clapton, Richards, and James; hours (literally) of convivial conversation with Little Richard, Bo Diddley, and other rock pioneers. But if you’re the type who can’t turn away from car wrecks, don’t miss “The Reluctant Movie Star,” an hour-long “making of” documentary, for it’s here that Hackford and the others who worked on the film tell their war stories. The Chuck Berry they know demanded to be paid every day, in cash, or he’d refuse to be filmed. He showed up for a dinner meeting at L.A.’s posh Le Dome with a bag of McDonald’s takeout. And two days before the St. Louis concert, he announced that he was leaving town for a gig in Ohio, where he proceeded to blow out his voice–so his vocals all had to be overdubbed after the fact (an extra payday, natch). Hail! Hail! Rock n’ Roll was already an entertaining two hours. But the various extra material, none of it seen before and all of it introduced by Hackford, makes this “ultimate collector’s addition” a must-have. –Sam Graham
Chuck Berry – Hail! Hail! Rock N’ Roll
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November 23rd, 2009
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What everyone fails to realize is how wonderfully Keith Richards screwed up one of the greatest celebrations in Rock History (honoring the great Chuck Berry). Keith was responsible for picking band members, arranging the songs, and choosing the artists who would sing along with Chuck on his Rock classics. Keith failed on all fronts. The drummer he picked sucked! He totally screwed up the timing of Chuck’s songs. Go back to an earlier clip in the movie where Chuck is performing at the Cosmopolitan in St. Louis. Chuck is bangin’ out the great autobiographical song “Bio”. He’s playin’ with just a combo (bass & drums) and he’s awesome and so is his band. The drivin’ sound is pure Chuck Berry and that sound is what made him a legend. Now off to the main focal point of the film, the celebration concert. Total disaster. Chuck knew he was goin’ down, that’s why he ran over to Keith and tried to have him change the key of the song he was singin’. Keith tells him “no.” Maybe if Chuck had slugged him a little harder a few years back, Keith would have taken the hint and not shown up to ruin a celebration honoring the greatest Rock ‘N Roll pioneer of the 20th century. The movie gets 2 stars, one for Chuck and one for Eric Clapton who’s nothin’ short of great.
Rating: 2 / 5
I’m french and I want to know if the film will be exist with french subtittle ?
thank you to answer
Philippe ( france )
Rating: 1 / 5
I’m disappointed in the way they film-makers chose to author the deluxe set. Navigation is difficult and the 2nd disc was very difficult to get it to play. Content is good getting it off the disc is difficult.
Rating: 2 / 5
The four DVD set Chuck Berry Hail Hail Rock & Roll is an extremely great perspective of Mr. Rock & Roll. The first DVD is extremly good with a lot of great Chuck Berry. The second DVD is very good since it does have some Chuck Berry playing. The Third DVD is not as good due to not having enough Chuck Berry playing. And the fourth DVD while very good has too much talking and little or no Chuck Berry playing, except some Chuck Berry right hand piano playing with Little Richard. With more Chuck Berry actually playing and singing it would break the sound barrier to rate a new catagory 10.
Rating: 4 / 5
There is NO question that Chuck Berry INVENTED Rock and Roll Guitar – PERIOD. But I tend to question the “integrity” of…”whoever” when I can’t obtain just the concert iself without 3 other useless CD’s of Chuck Berry whining. Is this available, just the concert and no…”memories?” I’ll purchase THAT, but 45 bucks for an excellent concert and 3 useless CD’s is totally out of the question. Sorry. There it is. And there IS a less expensive version of this available (from Starbucks Coffee????????????) with just the concert film and a CD of some Chuck Berry music probably not found in dillitantes collection of “Chuck Berry Music.” Just look for it…
Rating: 3 / 5