Showing posts with label david gilmour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label david gilmour. Show all posts

Shine On- Live Review

Shine On- Live
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Are you looking to buy Shine On- Live? Here is the right place to find the great deals. we can offer discounts of up to 90% on Shine On- Live. Check out the link below:

>> Click Here to See Compare Prices and Get the Best Offers

Shine On- Live ReviewEste es un material muy bueno de la gira de "A Momentary Lapse of Reason" pero no es nada nuevo, simplemente es el audio de "Delicate Sound of Thunder Video", la única diferencia es que aparece la canción "Money" que no está en la versión europea del mismo...
Shine On Live = Delicate Sound of Thunder Video. NO NEW MATERIAL, but have a good quality of sound...
Greetings from Venezuela!Shine On- Live Overview

Want to learn more information about Shine On- Live?

>> Click Here to See All Customer Reviews & Ratings Now
Read More...

The Strat Pack: Live in Concert Review

The Strat Pack: Live in Concert
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Are you looking to buy The Strat Pack: Live in Concert? Here is the right place to find the great deals. we can offer discounts of up to 90% on The Strat Pack: Live in Concert. Check out the link below:

>> Click Here to See Compare Prices and Get the Best Offers

The Strat Pack: Live in Concert ReviewLet's cut to the chase, shall we? The reason I obtained this dvd was because I love guitar and want to obtain the best guitar dvds out there. This DVD is pretty darn lame for a show that's supposed to be celebrating the Fender Stratocaster electric guitar on the occasion of it's 50th Anniversary, a huge milestone for a pop culture icon. There are basically two reasons to buy it: Gary Moore's incendiary tribute to Jimi Hendrix on "Red House," so hot it will melt your dvd player, and David Gilmour's three songs.
The rest is pretty tepid and the roster features some no-name talent that have NO Business being on that stage: Theresa Andersson!? Who? Yeah, she plays guitar, but she's a rhythm player. Jamie Cullum?! Who?! Nobody in his band even PLAYS guitar! What were these producers even thinking putting a keyboard band like this on the bill, LET ALONE the video? Amy Winehouse?! Who? She's a weak singer that can barely hold her own on Karoake Night at Billy Bob's BBQ-O-Rama and would got stomped by "American Idol's" Simon.
A few other fret-grinders play well: Hank Marvin (great version of "Sleepwalk"), Albert Lee, and Brian May. Paul Rodgers is in excellent voice. Joe Walsh slogs through four tunes, but his playing here cannot hold a candle to his monumental performance on Clapton's "Crossroad" Guitar concert DVD. He looks very tired and shagged out.
The All-Star jam at the end is awful, mostly because they chose a poor vehicle for guitar soloing, Rod Stewart's "Stay With Me."
Where were the rest of the Stratocaster greats? Ever hear of a guy named Eric Clapton? Fender even sells a Clapton Strat model. If I am organizing this show, I organize it around Clapton's schedule and I don't do it without him! How about Richie Blackmore, Yngvie Malmsteen, Jeff Beck (another guy you cannot do a Strat tribute show without), Mark Knopfler, and a slew of others I am no doubt forgetting.
The packaging for the DVD is so poor it bears commenting. The DVD's graphic design is incredibly weak...it drags the entire product into B-grade level. Staid and trite font choices along with cookie-cutter presentation of photos is at a quality level high school seniors can produce in a few days in Photoshop. The producers, Eagel Rock Productions, either were too cheap to hire real graphic designers and artists or their staffers need to go back to design school for a few more years.
The show has a very UK-bent to it (shot in the UK at London's Wembley Arena), which is odd since Fender is an American company. How you stage a production like this for such an important occasion in rock and pop culture without the requisite talent is beyond me. A much better value for your money is Clapton's "Crossroads" Concert DVD. All this being said, it bears repeating that Gary Moore's "Red House" really captures the spirit of the celebrated electric guitar and the event. The producers of this show at least go that right, and it's one of the greatest versions of "Red House" I've ever heard.
One can only hope when the 75th Anniversary of The Strat comes around, they look back on this terrible flop for the 50th and produce a show worthy of this great electric instrument.The Strat Pack: Live in Concert OverviewItem Name: The Strat Pack: Live in Concert [Blu-ray]; Studio:Eagle Rock Ent

Want to learn more information about The Strat Pack: Live in Concert?

>> Click Here to See All Customer Reviews & Ratings Now
Read More...

Roger Hodgson: Take the Long Way Home - Live in Montreal (2007) Review

Roger Hodgson: Take the Long Way Home - Live in Montreal (2007)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Are you looking to buy Roger Hodgson: Take the Long Way Home - Live in Montreal (2007)? Here is the right place to find the great deals. we can offer discounts of up to 90% on Roger Hodgson: Take the Long Way Home - Live in Montreal (2007). Check out the link below:

>> Click Here to See Compare Prices and Get the Best Offers

Roger Hodgson: Take the Long Way Home - Live in Montreal (2007) ReviewI've recently seen Roger Hodgson singing at the "Concert for Diana" in July and it was terrible. Partly he sang off-key: "The Logical Song" turned into "The Horrible Song". In fact I was very sad to see that this singer finally has reached the age when the voice doesn't always sound as you wanna have it.
BUT:
It seems that Roger Hodgson just had a very, very, very bad day at the "Concert for Diana". Because the show on this DVD is ABSOLUTELY FANTASTIC. His voice as you know it for years, no singing off-key, an audience singing along and giving him standing ovations after almost each song. Plus a Roger Hodgson full of energy + in high spirits. Plus excellent picture quality + superb audio quality.
Some movies are so-called "Feel-Good-Movies". And I call this concert a "Feel-Good-Concert". It's perfect. When I've finished watching it just a few minutes ago, I felt so happy although the weather outside was cold and rainy. A typical day to feel blue, but this DVD has saved my day.
And I think, it's a show to see and hear over and over again.
For all Roger Hodgson and Supertramp fans: THIS DVD IS A MUST!!!Roger Hodgson: Take the Long Way Home - Live in Montreal (2007) Overview

Want to learn more information about Roger Hodgson: Take the Long Way Home - Live in Montreal (2007)?

>> Click Here to See All Customer Reviews & Ratings Now
Read More...

David Gilmour in Concert - Live at Robert Wyatt's Meltdown (2002) Review

David Gilmour in Concert - Live at Robert Wyatt's Meltdown (2002)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Are you looking to buy David Gilmour in Concert - Live at Robert Wyatt's Meltdown (2002)? Here is the right place to find the great deals. we can offer discounts of up to 90% on David Gilmour in Concert - Live at Robert Wyatt's Meltdown (2002). Check out the link below:

>> Click Here to See Compare Prices and Get the Best Offers

David Gilmour in Concert - Live at Robert Wyatt's Meltdown (2002) ReviewFreed from the shackles of what Pink Floyd has become, David Gilmour sounds positively liberated on his new live DVD, David Gilmour in Concert. The years have snuck up on him, as it inevitably does to all of our heroes, but his voice is even more expressive now than it has ever been. He's actually becoming more like his long-estranged counterpart Roger Waters, and that's a good thing, a great thing in fact.
They are both world-weary veterans having finally arrived at similar crossroads in their lives after drifting apart in their not-so-distant youth. Both men's voices are thinning, sometimes straining to reach notes. While Waters is still the bleeding-heart poet, and Gilmour still the guitar virtuoso, both seem tired of the bloated excesses of the rock n' roll machine that had welcomed them with open arms all those years ago, instead opting to embrace a more deconstructed approach to performing.
Even moreso than Waters' latest hits tour, Gilmour has unearthed rarely performed gems and obscure covers, and has re-invented overplayed classics. The result is breathtaking. His take on Syd Barrett's seminal Terrapin is pure magic, and Dick Parry's sax solo on Shine On is a freeform revelation. It's this sense of experimentation that has been missing from Gilmour's repetoire since he and the Floyd recorded Dark Side. He's even managed to take his latter-day Floyd tunes into exciting new directions. Take High Hopes for example, what once sounded somewhat inflated and bombastic confined to its awkward Floyd-by-numbers construct, has now taken on a more stripped and organic flavor. Even his lyrics play better without the baggage of the brand name. It's also wonderful to see Richard Wright, playing Breakthrough from his own Broken China album, sounding relaxed and beautiful.
Much of the beauty of the performances is in the rawness of the sound; often times you can hear each finger slide down the fret, each bend of the string. It's a clear and pristine recording to be sure, but it's not sterile and perfect, it's live, alive. Listening to the 5.1 surround, you could swear Gilmour is just feet away, acoustic guitar slung over his shoulder, entertaining guests at an intimate gathering.
The bonus features are equally rewarding. Gilmour's cover of "Don't", the Leiber and Stoller song made classic by Elvis Presley, is heart-wrenchingly beautiful, and his rendering of Shakespeare's Sonnet 18, with Michael Kamen, is sublime.
I was quite frankly shocked at how much I enjoyed this DVD. I've already played it more times than I've played Waters' excellent In The Flesh Live. I'd nearly forgotten how definitive Gilmour's guitar sound is, and how much I missed his voice. It's truly the sound of a wisened man with nothing to prove, a man no longer haunted by the ghost of Roger Waters. If this release is any indication of things to come, I will be waiting with just as much anticipation for Gilmour's next solo album as I am for Roger's, and praying for old friends to make amends.David Gilmour in Concert - Live at Robert Wyatt's Meltdown (2002) Overview

Want to learn more information about David Gilmour in Concert - Live at Robert Wyatt's Meltdown (2002)?

>> Click Here to See All Customer Reviews & Ratings Now
Read More...

David Gilmour: Remember That Night - Live from the Royal Albert Hall (2007) Review

David Gilmour: Remember That Night - Live from the Royal Albert Hall (2007)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Are you looking to buy David Gilmour: Remember That Night - Live from the Royal Albert Hall (2007)? Here is the right place to find the great deals. we can offer discounts of up to 90% on David Gilmour: Remember That Night - Live from the Royal Albert Hall (2007). Check out the link below:

>> Click Here to See Compare Prices and Get the Best Offers

David Gilmour: Remember That Night - Live from the Royal Albert Hall (2007) ReviewLiterally worth five times the price and an equal in it's own way to PULSE, with intimacy and a freer feel offsetting the more minimal lighting (although enormously impressive in its own right.)
As the other reviewers have given an accurate overview I'll just mention one cut, that being "Comfortably Numb," which you and I know every second of by heart, it's in our blood.
This performance features David Bowie sharing lead vocals. Now the idea of anyone but Mr. Gilmour taking over vocals on this song is enough to make my hair catch on fire, but THIS WORKS. It actually becomes a Bowie song while remaining a Floyd epoch. It's thrilling, it's almost dreamlike to watch a singer of equal caliber and credibility to Mr. Gilmour share this song and to take it's inherent drama and mystery to another level entirely.
The DVD also points out what a superb disc "On An Island" is, sadly overlooked by too many Floyd fans for not being heavy enough (man.)
And it's in high def - you can almost reach out and shake Rick Wright's hand.
Extras are top flight, set is an incredible bargain and you'll have trouble turning it off and going to bed. Mr. Gilmour once again proves that he's in a class all by himself, a category of artist of which there is only one.David Gilmour: Remember That Night - Live from the Royal Albert Hall (2007) OverviewREMEMBER THAT NIGHT:LIVE FROM THE ROY - DVD Movie

Want to learn more information about David Gilmour: Remember That Night - Live from the Royal Albert Hall (2007)?

>> Click Here to See All Customer Reviews & Ratings Now
Read More...