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Category:    Home > Reviews > Concert > Rock > Pop > Blues > British > Progressive > Metal > Punk > Showtunes > Country > Documentary > Cream – Royal Albert Hall: London May 2-3-5-6 2005/Dream Theater: Live At Budokan (2004/Eagle Blu-rays)/Emerson, Lake & Palmer 40th Anniversary Reunion Concert (2011/MVD Blu-ray + DVD)/The Hollies: Lo

Cream – Royal Albert Hall: London May 2-3-5-6 2005/Dream Theater: Live At Budokan (2004/Eagle Blu-rays)/Emerson, Lake & Palmer 40th Anniversary Reunion Concert (2011/MVD Blu-ray + DVD)/The Hollies: Look Through Any Window 1963 – 1975 (Eagle DVD)/Iggy & The Stooges: Raw Power Live – In The Hands Of The Fans (2011/MVD Blu-ray + DVD)/Bette Midler: The Showgirl Must Go On (2010/Image Blu-ray)/Queensryche: Mindcrime At The Moor (2007/Eagle Blu-ray)/Taylor Swift: Journey To Fearless (2011/Shout! Factory Blu-ray + DVD)

 

Picture: B-/B-/B- & C+/C+/C+ & C/B-/B-/B- & C     Sound: B/B/C+/C+/C+/B/B/B & B-     Extras: C/B-/C+/B/C/D/C+/D     Music Programs: B-/B-/C+/B/C+/B-/C+/C+

 

 

Here’s a big batch of new music releases you might be interested in.

 

 

Cream – Royal Albert Hall: London May 2-3-5-6 2005 is on Blu-ray and actually our first concert by the band, though we did cover the Classic Albums – Cream: Disraeli Gears DVD a while ago at this link:

 

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/4137/Classic+Albums:+Cream+%E2%80%9

 

This is a solid reunion concert, but performances of the classics are mixed at times and this is for fans as much as anyone, though it is a consistent concert as Eric Clapton, Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce perform classics like I’m So Glad, Stormy Monday, Crossroads, White Room and Sunshine Of Your Love, but they still sound like the band they used to be and that is a good thing.  Interviews with the trio separately, three bonus songs and an illustrated booklet with tech information are the only extras.

 

Dream Theater: Live At Budokan (2004) is our first-ever encounter with the progressive metal band that has a serious following and is not bad, as this is a popular concert release that is as good as any a place to start if you want to be introduced to the band, especially on Blu-ray.  This is a good bit of material and you will know whether you like them or not early on, but there is no doubt of their talent and that they are effectively different.  Extras are listed as both Bonus Materials (5 sections including a tour documentary and more music playing) and Special Features, but are the same.

 

The great Progressive Rock Band Emerson, Lake & Palmer 40th Anniversary Reunion Concert brings the band back together again for a good concert that resulted in the same feelings I had about the Cream show above, but I like ELP even more as these links (with other links) will show:

 

Emerson, Lake & Palmer: Pictures At An Exhibition Special Edition (1972)

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/10262/Emerson,+Lake+&+Palmer+%E2%80

+

Live At Montreux Blu-ray

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/10001/Emerson,+Lake+&+Palmer+%E2%80

 

They had not played since 1998 (!) but classics like Karn Evil 9, Lucky Man and their classic extrapolations of classical masterworks still work and drive purists nuts.  A 28+ minutes documentary and an illustrated booklet with tech information are the only extras in both the Blu-ray and DVD editions.

 

The best release here continues the British Invasion series we began covering in a box set that included Small Faces, Dusty Springfield, Herman’s Hermits and Gerry & The Pacemakers elsewhere on this site.  The Hollies: Look Through Any Window 1963 – 1975 is a terrific documentary about the rise of the band as one of the earliest successes of that British Invasion with a song that is the subtitle of this disc, as well as Bus Stop and Carrie-Anne.  After trying something different with King Midas In Reverse (one of their best ever songs), they landed more hits with He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother and Long Cool Woman In A Black Dress before Graham Nash left for his own success.  Nash eventually returned for an ill-fated 1983 reunion luckily skipped here, but also missed cutting their best-selling record and possibly their masterpiece, The Air That I Breathe.  This is as strong as the entries in the Chrome Dreams In Review DVD music series and a must-see for all serious music fans.  Extras include 22 performances available outside of the documentary, 10 minutes of rare 1967 Abbey Road Studio footage and full color backstage tour footage from the 1960s.

 

Iggy Pop is also inarguable and Iggy & The Stooges: Raw Power Live – In The Hands Of The Fans is out latest entry in home video release featuring the Punk pioneer, more of which you can read about starting with this great Chrome Dreams DVD release, The Sacred Triangle: Bowie, Iggy & Lou: 1971 – 1973:

 

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/10911/Brian+Eno+%E2%80%93+The+Man

 

This is one of those occasional concerts where fans are allowed to shoot the footage, which is later edited into the final product.  Like The Beastie Boys’ Awesome, I… Shot That concert, this has its fun, but tends to be more limited than exciting and the result here was uneven.  Fans will enjoy it as classic tracks from that classic album are performed, but Iggy and the band still got it.  An illustrated booklet with tech information is the only extra.

 

Offering more showtunes and pop records is Bette Midler: The Showgirl Must Go On (2010) in which the legendary actress and performer sings her various hits like the overplayed Wind Beneath My Wings, and even more overplayed From A Distance (to paraphrase Miss Midler form an older awards show, I try to get as distant form it as possible every time it plays somewhere), decent title song from The Rose, underrated Friends from the great mystery film The Last Of Sheila, her fun cover of The Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy and a nice cover of the old tune The Glory Of Love (not the Peter Cetera catastrophe).  The great Toni Basil (Mickey) choreographed the show and it is stronger than you might think.

 

Like Dream Theater, this is also our first official look at the much-loved band Queensryche and this live version of their Mindcrime At The Moor (2007) Rock Opera is not bad, though I never loved this band, I at least get they are saying things their fans love and that is why they continue to have a very loyal fan base.  They are one of the smarter bands who occupy their genre of Rock music and take what they do seriously, like their fans.  I could only take so much of it, but there is no denying their talent.  Extras include an illustrated booklet with tech information, while the Blu-ray adds the late Ronnie James Dio dueting on The Chase, a Tour Documentary and Queensryche: Rock & Ride.

 

Finally we have the new documentary Taylor Swift: Journey To Fearless (2011) which shows how the young Country Pop star rose from shunned child performer to a contract with RCA that she walked away form thinking it would go nowhere to being part of the start of a new company that put her on the map to big commercial and surprising critical success.  I may not be a fan of her music either, but she is a natural and it is a success story worth celebrating for a change versus the many overpushed phonies that churn out some of the worst music we have ever heard.  Running over two hours, this is all you’ll need to know about her, but it is well done.  There are no extras in either format edition.

 

 

The 1080i 1.78 X 1 digital High Definition image in all the Blu-rays look good for the limits of 1080i shooting with some softness, motion blur and small aliasing errors, though Iggy and Swift (there’s a combination you’d never expect to see) suffer from more softness than expected especially more so in the anamorphically enhanced DVD versions sold separately, specifically in the case of Iggy from the amateur handling of the shoot and some less than HD cameras.  The ELP Blu-ray is solid enough, with its anamorphically enhanced DVD version not as weak by comparison.  The Hollies DVD is therefore not the weakest presentation here, especially as some of the footage looks good and is in fine condition all in a 1.33 X 1 presentation.

 

All the Blu-rays have DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mixes save Iggy and ELP from MVD, which have the same Dolby Digital 5.1 as their DVD counterparts.  This can be disappointing, though in the case of Iggy makes less of a difference as that audio is varied by the nature of the way that concert was shot.  The ELP discs could have sounded a bit better, especially for such sonically savvy musicians as they are, but all the MVD discs have slightly harsh highs.  The Hollies DVD has Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo that is more consistent than you might expect.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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