14th August 2007 08:44 PM |
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Nellcote |
The Rolling Stones – Under Review 1967 - 1969 is a 90
minute documentary film reviewing the music and career of the band during, arguably, their most creative period. In the second half of the 1960s the sound of the Stones changed dramatically, while concurrently Jagger and Richards’ songwriting hit an all time high. These advances didn’t just affect The Rolling Stones forever, they changed Rock n’ Roll forever too. This DVD includes rare musical performances (many never before available on DVD), and obscure footage, rare interviews and private photographs of and with the band. It also contains contributions from; 1960s NME editor and friend of the band, Keith Altham; Village Voice music editor, Robert Christgau; Stones backing vocalist, Merry Clayton; Stones session musician, Byron Berline; Rolling Stones biographer, Alan Clayson; Keith Richards biographer, Kris Needs; ex-Rolling Stone magazine editor Anthony De Curtis, Mojo magazine’s Barney Hoskins, Uncut magazine’s Nigel Williamson and many others. In addition, live and studio recordings of Stones classics have been added, as well as footage of and comment on many of their pivotal influences during this period.
Bonus Materials:
Special Feature: Keith Altham remembers The Beggars Banquet Press Reception
Interactive Gaming Feature
Full Contributor Biographies
Beyond DVD section
Track Listing/Features:
Jumpin’ Jack Flash
We Love You
No Expectations
Sympathy For The Devil
Street Fighting Man
Gimme Shelter
Brown Sugar
many others!
http://mvdb2b.com/search/item.php?STOCK_NO=SIDVD531
Also, on the 18 September 07...
KEITH RICHARDS-UNDER REVIEW
He’s the baddest of them all, the man with at least nine lives and the most Rock N’ Roll performer since the dawn of time – and we love him for all of it. This DVD features a 2 hour documentary film which details the life and career of the one man who made it all seem possible. It includes rare and classic musical performances re-assessed by a panel of esteemed experts, exclusive interviews, obscure footage and seldom seen photographs. Also included is footage of and comment on Keith’s pivotal influence, live and studio recordings of classics such as Satisfaction, Jumping Jack Flash, Brown Sugar, Tumbling Dice, Start Me Up and many others, plus bonus features.
Bonus Materials:
Beyond DVD section
Full contributor biographies
The hardest Keith Richards interactive quiz in the world ever
Keef Stories’ – personal reminisces, with Keith Altham and Kris Needs
Track Listing/Features:
Satisfaction
Jumping Jack Flash
Brown Sugar
Tumbling Dice
Start Me Up
+ more!
http://mvdb2b.com/search/item.php?STOCK_NO=SIDVD526
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14th August 2007 11:13 PM |
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GotToRollMe |
Thanks Nellie! Those plus a bunch more here:
http://www.digitallyobsessed.com/showrelease.php3?ID=8844
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15th August 2007 12:23 PM |
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guitarman53 |
Thanks for the information, looking forward to it, that period of time in the late 60's, I followed The Stones to a tee, one of my sisters used to joke that I even knew what they had for breakfast. |
15th August 2007 12:39 PM |
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Saint Sway |
sounds like more of those crap dvds that are out there with absolutely no interview footage of the band. Just interview clips with no one you ever heard of before doing commentary on the Stones. These often also have on original Stones music on them and often worse - just generic background music played over a mix of stale clips and still photos. |
15th August 2007 12:55 PM |
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guitarman53 |
quote: Saint Sway wrote:
sounds like more of those crap dvds that are out there with absolutely no interview footage of the band. Just interview clips with no one you ever heard of before doing commentary on the Stones. These often also have on original Stones music on them and often worse - just generic background music played over a mix of stale clips and still photos.
You may be right about that, I've had lots of those, like the box set "Just For the record" if it's not endorsed by the band, it's just people being interviewed that knew them, like for instance in the film "Stoned" not one single Stones song was used that they wrote, they used Little Red Rooster because they didn't write it, The Stones didn't want anything to do with it (the movie) |
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