“The Music Never Stopped” Movie Uses Grateful Dead Music in Music Therapy


They say if you remember the 60’s, you weren’t there.  If you remember a Grateful Dead show, you likely weren’t there either.  But what if all you remembered was those moments connected to the songs from your past? This film will make you laugh til you cry, cry til you weep and want to leap from your seat and dance.  J.K. Simmons and Lou Taylor Pucci’s performance as Henry and Gabriel are excellent. Musically, Grateful Dead fans will love not only the song choices but Gabriel’s unique way of explaining the music to his father.

“The film is a moving testament not only to the love between a father and his son, but to the miraculous power of music to heal a damaged brain. Remembering music, listening to it or playing it, is entirely in the present, and, while it lasts, it can bridge even the abyss of extreme amnesia or dementia. Music can be more powerful than any drugs.”
– Dr. Oliver Sacks

“The Music Never Stopped,” based on the case study “The Last Hippie” by Dr. Oliver Sacks, M.D. (“Awakenings”), chronicles the journey of a father and son adjusting to cerebral trauma and a lifetime of missed opportunities. Through the music that embodied the generation gap of the 1960s, the film weaves the heartwarming progress of Henry (J.K. Simmons) and Gabriel (Lou Taylor Pucci).

Henry (J.K. Simmons) and Gabriel (Lou Taylor Pucci) outside the Grateful Dead concert

With father and son on the opposite side of musical tastes as well as politics and the war in Vietnam, Gabriel disappears into the counterculture following a devastating confrontation with his father.  The film opens nearly two decades later, when Henry and wife Helen (played by Cara Seymour) are told their son has been found wandering the streets of New York City.  Gabriel has a brain tumor that has caused extensive brain damage, and needs immediate surgery.  When he recovers, he is in a near-catatonic state, his brain damaged to the point that it cannot recall or create any long-term memories.  Effectively, Gabriel still thinks he is in 1968.

After his operation, the extent of Gabriel’s condition is made clear: the tumor damaged the part of the brain that creates new memories. For Gabriel, past, present, and future are indistinguishable, and he still lives in the era of Vietnam, acid tests, and psychedelic music. Determined not to let their son slip away from them again, Henry and wife Helen (Cara Seymour) vow to connect with Gabriel, who is barely able to communicate effectively. Unhappy with Gabriel’s progress, Henry researches brain injuries, which leads him to Dr. Dianne Daly (Julia Ormond). She is a music therapist who has made progress with victims of brain tumors using music.

Gabriel works with his music therapist (Julia Ormond)

As Diane works more with Gabriel, she realizes that he seems to respond actively to the music of the psychedelic era – the Beatles, Bob Dylan, and particularly the Grateful Dead – which has a remarkable effect on Gabriel. He is able to have conversations and express himself, even though he is unaware the era of his music has long passed. Henry can’t stand rock and roll – but he is determined to forge some memories and a new relationship with his son. While his own health fails, Henry begins his own pilgrimage through the bands of the sixties. As he learns the songs that animate his son’s soul, he indeed begins to form a most unusual but emotionally vibrant bond with the child he thought he had lost.

 

 

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