"Long Live Rock" Soundtrack Lyrics
Movie • 2021
Track Listing
"Long Live Rock… Celebrate the Chaos (Documentary Soundtrack, 2021)" – Album Guide to Tracks and Key Moments
Overview
Is this a concert film or a portrait of a tribe? Long Live Rock… Celebrate the Chaos plants its flag in the second camp: a feature-length dive into modern hard-rock fandom, built from festival footage, backstage interviews, and the rituals that bind the scene. It features members of Metallica, Slipknot, Guns N’ Roses, Korn, Avenged Sevenfold, Rob Zombie, Five Finger Death Punch, Rage Against the Machine, Halestorm, and more.
There’s no retail “Various Artists” soundtrack album. Instead, the film leans on live/festival music bites, library of artist clips secured for the doc, and a newly cut theme: Halestorm’s cover of The Who’s “Long Live Rock.” That cover functions as the documentary’s calling card and runs over promo materials and end sections.
Questions & Answers
- What is the correct title and year?
- Long Live Rock… Celebrate the Chaos (documentary, 2021). U.S. release handled by Abramorama.
- Is there an official soundtrack album?
- No commercial compilation has been issued. The standout new track tied to the film is Halestorm’s cover of The Who’s “Long Live Rock.”
- Who appears in the film?
- Interviews and footage include members of Metallica, Slipknot, Guns N’ Roses, Korn, Avenged Sevenfold, Rob Zombie, Five Finger Death Punch, Greta Van Fleet, Halestorm, among others.
- Who directed it?
- Jonathan McHugh; produced with Gary Spivack and Jonathan Platt.
- Where was it shot?
- Across multiple U.S. hard-rock festivals and venues; the film focuses on the live-show ecosystem and fan culture.
- What song headlines the campaign?
- Halestorm’s “Long Live Rock” (a new cover of the Pete Townshend/The Who anthem) anchors the marketing and plays in the film.
Notes & Trivia
- Halestorm recorded “Long Live Rock” specifically for the film; the track was promoted ahead of release.
- The original “Long Live Rock” was written by Pete Townshend (The Who), first appearing on the 1974 compilation Odds & Sods and later as a 1979 single.
- The film frames rock festivals as modern community hubs—tailgates, sign-making, pit etiquette, memorials.
- Distribution in North America was handled by Abramorama.
Genres & Themes
Modern hard rock / metal (festival-era headliners) = communal catharsis and spectacle. Classic-rock lineage (The Who via the title track) = continuity and heritage. Documentary score & stings (brief transitions) = connective tissue between interviews, crowd life, and performance snippets.
Tracks & Moments
Because there is no retail album, below are the most verifiable music moments tied to the film’s release and trailer materials.
“Long Live Rock” — Halestorm (The Who cover)
Moment: Functions as the film’s theme and promo anchor; used over marketing spots and in-film sections. Non-diegetic over montage, then drops into end stretches.
Why it matters: Bridges classic-rock DNA to the doc’s 2010s-2020s festival reality; a thesis in three minutes.
Festival performance snippets — various artists
Moment: Trailer and feature sequences intercut crowd-shot riffs (Metallica, Slipknot, Korn, etc.) with interviews. Diegetic (on-stage) sound blended with VO.
Why it matters: Keeps the story grounded in the thing itself: the live wall of sound.
Fan-culture chants & memorials — field audio
Moment: Crowd sing-backs and candlelight clips surface between segments. Diegetic location sound.
Why it matters: Confirms the doc’s angle: community first, bands second.
Music–Story Links
Halestorm’s title track makes the lineage explicit—The Who’s 1970s broadside reframed by a modern frontwoman. Short, licensed bites from headliner catalogs sketch the ecosystem: riffs as glue, pits as social code, sing-alongs as secular ritual.
How It Was Made
Directed by Jonathan McHugh; produced with Gary Spivack and Jonathan Platt. The team shot across major U.S. festivals and stitched interviews with artists, promoters, clinicians, and fans. Press materials emphasized that it’s “not a concert film” but a culture study; Halestorm’s cover of “Long Live Rock” was commissioned to headline the project.
Reception & Quotes
“A deep dive into the culture of hard rock music.” Billboard, trailer premiere
“Metallica, Slipknot and more feature… watch the trailer.” NME
“Makes the case for metal longevity via its fans.” Rogers Movie Nation
Additional Info
- Theme/feature single: “Long Live Rock” — Halestorm (2021).
- Artists featured across footage: Metallica; Guns N’ Roses; Slipknot; Korn; Avenged Sevenfold; Rob Zombie; Five Finger Death Punch; Rage Against the Machine; Greta Van Fleet; Halestorm; and others.
- Distribution: Abramorama; digital rollout March 2021; later ad-supported streaming.
- Official site provides context and screening/streaming updates.
- No official soundtrack compilation released as of today.
Technical Info
- Title: Long Live Rock… Celebrate the Chaos
- Year: 2021
- Type: Documentary (music/culture)
- Director: Jonathan McHugh
- Theme/Promotional Track: “Long Live Rock” — Halestorm (The Who cover)
- Key Participants (selection): Members of Metallica, Slipknot, Guns N’ Roses, Korn, Avenged Sevenfold, Rob Zombie, Five Finger Death Punch, Greta Van Fleet, Halestorm
- Label status: No retail soundtrack album
- Distributor: Abramorama (U.S.)
Canonical Entities & Relations
| Subject | Verb | Object |
|---|---|---|
| Long Live Rock… Celebrate the Chaos (film) | directed by | Jonathan McHugh |
| Long Live Rock… Celebrate the Chaos (film) | features | Members of Metallica; Slipknot; Guns N’ Roses; Korn; Avenged Sevenfold; Rob Zombie; Five Finger Death Punch; Greta Van Fleet; Halestorm |
| Halestorm | performs | “Long Live Rock” (The Who cover) for the film |
| Abramorama | distributed | Long Live Rock… Celebrate the Chaos |
| The Who | originated | “Long Live Rock” (written by Pete Townshend) |
Sources: Official site; Billboard trailer note; NME trailer report; Rotten Tomatoes/Apple TV pages; Variety distribution report; Rolling Stone/Loudwire on Halestorm cover; The Who song history.
This collection of music can be considered a benefit of the Cherry Suede band, who sang every single song among these 12 in the soundtrack. In fact, it can be said that the collection is sustained in the same direction, soft rock, which is represented by each song individually. If to judge the instrumental kit, we may say that the listener will be immersed in total domination of the two 6-stringed guitars (e.g. in Learning How To Let You Go). The other elements appear here only occasionally. Thus, minor inclusions are from the violins, timpani, drums and some shakers. Voices are great here too – soft, insinuating, reminding, delicate, soothing. The first voice, in the same way as a guitar to all other instruments, completely dominates above the second voice, which appears as an independent only a few times, and the rest of the time echoes to the first. Actually, the first soloist looks much more as a rocker than the other one. Therefore, in the case of a possible group falling apart, the main soloist will begin his career and he will be much more successful than the second. It always happens in established teams of two people – one of them is a leader and the second is a lead. After all, there are no two strong leaders in a duo that will stay together for a long time. The paths of such people still condemned to the difference, because everyone will have their own vision of the development and of the oeuvre. The perfect mood remains after listening to all of the collection (the top of which is a composition named What You Do To Me), when it is wanted to say "How good I feel" and look at the stars with falling comets. Song When I'm Gone is one of the best works of the Cherry Suede band. Listen, enjoy and share this music with the world and you will feel good. And with such musical accompaniment, it will be easier and more enjoyable to walk through life.November, 13th 2025
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