AUSTIN, Tex. â" Dave Grohl brought his super-group the Sound City Players to Austinâs South by Southwest Music Festival on Thursday for a final concert, thrilling several thousand people in a yard behind Stubbs BBQ.
Mr. Grohlâs boyish glee at having assembled musicians on the bill was evident as the concert progressed. Stevie Nicks, John Fogerty and Rick Springfield all arrived onstage to play a few of their best-known songs, while Mr. Grohl beamed like a fanboy.
âYou can only imagine that itâs my lifeâs greatest gift that I get to call up these people who I consider heroes and have them come on stage and jam with me,â said Mr. Grohl, who earlier in the day gave the keynote address for the festival.
Others on the bill included Lee Ving of Fear, Corey Taylor of Slipknot, Chris Goss of Masters of Reality, the guitarist Rick Nielsen of Cheap Trick, the drummer Brad Wilk from Rage Against the Machine and the Nirvana bassist Krist Novoselic. They were backed up by the keyboardis Rami Jaffee and several members of Mr. Grohlâs band, Foo Fighters.
The group was formed to make Mr. Grohlâs recently released documentary about the Sound City recording studio in Los Angeles, a storied but decrepit building where Nirvana recorded their breakout album âNevermindâ in 1991. Various lineups of the Sound City Players have done shows in New York, London and Los Angeles to promote the film and its soundtrack since January.
Like the other shows, the Austin concert was largely a celebration of oldies, though there were songs from the filmâs original soundtrack sprinkled into the set list. Mr. Grohl, playing master of ceremonies, calling his rock ânâ roll heroes to the stage one after another, while Foo Fighters proved they could have been a classic rock cover band.
Stevie Nicks did an inspired rendition of âDreamsâ early in the show. Rick Springfield got the crowd singing along his hits, like âJesseâs Girlâ and âIâ! ve Done Everything for You.â
Mr. Ving played the aging punk troublemaker and iconoclast to the hilt as he powered through a string of Fear songs, including âI Love Living in the Cityâ and âI Donât Care About You.â
Corey Taylor and Taylor Hawkins, the Foo Fighters drummer, provided the vocals for Cheap Trickâs âI Want You to Want Meâ and âSurrender,â as Mr. Grohl played drums and Mr. Nielsen provided the riffs and took a couple solos.
John Fogerty, the songwriter and lead singer for Creedence Clearwater Revival, closed the show with several of that bandâs greatest hits, among them âTravelinâ Band,â âBorn on the Bayou,â âProud Maryâ and âBad Moon Rising.â He and Mr. Grohl finished the two-and-half hour concert by trading verses on the protest song, âFortunate Son.â
The documentary âSound Cityâ is a love-letter from Mr. Grohl to the analog studio and its custom-made Neve console, on which a number of great albums by acts like Fleetood Mac, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and Neil Young were recorded.
When the studio closed in 2011, Mr. Grohl bought the console and used it to record several original tracks with Ms. Nicks, Mr. Fogerty, Mr. Springfield, Mr. Ving, Mr. Taylor, Trent Reznor and Paul McCartney. The first half of the firm tracks the history of the Sound City, while the second focuses on the the sessions that produced the soundtrack. Mr. Grohl has said the film is meant to celebrate âthe human element in music.â