Led Zeppelin: DVD [2 Discs]
|
Buying Choices |
23 new from CDN$ 23.96 |
6 used from CDN$ 22.98 |
(as of 2013-12-07 23:15:00 PST)
Product View |
See larger image and other views (with zoom) |
Product Details |
|||||
Manufacturer Rhino Home Video |
Recommended Age 8 years and up |
Brand Alfred |
Check All Offers | Add to Wish List | Add to Baby Registry | Customer Reviews |
Alfred Music Publishing is the world-s largest educational music publisher. Alfred produces educational, reference, pop, and performance materials for teachers, students, professionals, and hobbyists spanning every musical instrument, style, and difficulty level.
Clocking in at nearly five and a half hours, this DVD has been created from the few performances which were ever filmed during the band's lifetime: London's Royal Albert Hall in 1970, London's Earl's Court in 1975, and at England's Knebworth Festival in 1979, just one year before the death of drummer John Bonham. Visually and sonically stunning, this DVD has been painstakingly restored, remixed and remastered in Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround, DTS, and PCM 2-Channel Stereo under the supervision of Jimmy Page.
Exclamations of religious awe are in order. Legendary and long sought-after, this live Led Zeppelin collection is nothing less than the rock music equivalent of the Holy Grail. Quite simply, this is what all the fuss was about.
Given that they were the biggest band in the world, Zeppelin were notoriously camera-shy in their heyday. Their official filmic legacy until now has been just the fascinating but flawed The Song Remains the Same. While this new set presents some previously unseen footage from the same 1973 Madison Square Garden gigs, its real wonders lie in the earlier (1970) Royal Albert Hall footage and the later Earls Court (1975) and Knebworth (1979) concerts. Everything here looks and sounds new-minted, thanks to painstaking restoration and remastering of both audio and visual sources, a Herculean labor of love on the part of co-producer Dick Carruthers working hand-in-glove with Jimmy Page. Trawling through thousands of yards of previously unseen film and unheard tape recordings–some with missing visuals, some with missing audio–Page and Carruthers have chosen only the best possible footage available. They were also at pains to make the segments segue seamlessly so that the viewer is treated to what feels like a continuous concert–just sample the transition from a grainy Super 8 “Immigrant Song” (Sydney, 1972) to “Black Dog” at MSG.
Highlights? It's not hyperbole to say that every powerhouse minute of this collection (some 230 minutes of concert footage plus another hour and a half of extra DVD material) is a rare musical and visual treat. But hearing Page's violin bow work on “Dazed and Confused” in DTS or Dolby 5.1 is an experience not soon forgotten. –Mark Walker
Comments |
Become a fan of Your #1 Online Source for Toys and Games on Facebook for the inside scoop on the latest and best selling toys and games.