1.) Outside the US, “Mellow Yellow” peaked at No. (Both Good Vibrations by The Beach Boys and Winchester Cathedral by The New Vaudeville Band kept it from hitting No. “Touch Of Grey” (Live) – Grateful Dead*ġ0.“ Mellow Yellow” is a song written and recorded by Scottish singer-songwriter Donovan. “Not Fade Away/Goin’ Down The Road Feeling Bad” (Live) – Grateful Deadġ0. “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes” – Crosby, Stills & NashĨ. “Sugar Magnolia” (Live) – Grateful Dead*ħ. Visit for more info and access to select advance screenings.ģ.
The film opens in limited release on March 18. You can also pre-order the collection CD at. The Music Never Stopped – Music From The Motion Picture is now from available from digital retailers. I wasn’t going to do the film unless we could get the music.” “We were able to put together this incredible soundtrack with a great deal of detail, patience and luck. “Music is such an integral character,” director Jim Kohlberg says of the film. More will be blooming from The Tulips as they continue to write and record. The song was written by Kraig Jarret Johnson, sung by Chrissy Amphlett, accompanied by Charley Drayton, Kraig Jarret Johnson and Greg Wieczorek and produced by Charley Drayton. The soundtrack also features a new track from The Tulips, a musical group formed first as friends, then to perform "Summer Song" for the film. In addition to the three unreleased tracks, a trio of classic Dead recordings also appear on the soundtrack: “Ripple,” “Uncle John’s Band,” and the live version of “Not Fade Away/Goin’ Down The Road Feeling Bad” from their eponymous live album, better known as Skull & Roses. Both are included on the soundtrack, along with a previously unreleased live version of “Sugar Magnolia” recorded on Februin Port Chester, NY. Previously unreleased live performances of “Truckin’” (Noblesville, IN, 7/15/89) and “Touch of Grey” (East Rutherford, NJ, 10/14/89) can be heard playing during the scene. Indeed, music plays a vital role in the film, which features songs by Bob Dylan, Crosby, Stills and Nash, Steppenwolf, Donovan and the Dead, who wrote the song for which the film is named.Ī pivotal moment in the film features the father and son share a bonding moment while attending a Grateful Dead concert in the ’80s. Through the music that embodied the generation gap of the 1960s – particularly Grateful Dead – the father forms a most unusual but emotionally vibrant bond with the son he thought he had lost. Simmons) trying to re-connect with his estranged son (Lou Taylor Pucci), who is recovering from brain surgery that has left him unable to create any long-term memories, effectively stranding him in 1968. Oliver Sacks’ case study, “The Last Hippie.” Set in the mid-1980s, the film chronicles the struggles of a father (J. Soundtrack To Essential Pictures’ Film Features Six Grateful Dead Songs Including Three Previously Unreleased Live Recordings Digital Release Available Now, CD Arrives March 29Įssential Pictures presents The Music Never Stopped, a drama directed by Jim Kohlberg that is based on Dr.