Disco de Skinny Puppy: “Greater Wrong of the Right Live [DVD]”
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Título: |
Greater Wrong of the Right Live [DVD] |
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Fecha de Publicación:2005-09-27
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Tipo:Desconocido
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Género:Electronic/Dance, Metal, Goth Rock
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Sello Discográfico:SPV
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Letras Explícitas:Si
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UPC:693723638478
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DJBitter (toronto, ont. Canada) - 01 Septiembre 2005
10 personas de un total de 12 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- 2DVD promo infos
Disc 01:
The Greater Wrong of the Right tour live at Montreal & Toronto November 2004. Encore: first brap, convulsion, testure, brap, smothered hope
Disc 02:
Information Warfare by William Morrison
Eurotrauma: Skinny Puppy Live in Europe 1988 by DRG
Last Rights: Archival Footage
Too Dark Park: Archival Footage
Technical Features: Widescreen, All Regions, 5.1 Surround Sound, Dolby Digital
Director: William Morrison
Audio Mix: Ken "Hiwatt" Marshall
Cover Art: Fredox
Cover Design: Steven R Gilmore
Inside Cover Photography: Austin Young
Technical: 5.1 Surround Sound & Dolby Digital live content. Dolby Digital Stereo only disc 2. SPV USA version is NTSC. SPV.de version in PAL format
"" The second disc holds the 30 minutes segment titled "Eurotrauma" which revisits Puppy on tour in Europe in 1988. Culled from tapes shot primarily by the late Dwayne Rudolph Goettel and compiled and edited by ogre himself, this thirty minute segment is a day by day log of the tour from the bands point of view. Everything from life back stage and in the hotel to the band confronting the Berlin Wall before it was torn down. Along with a lot of highly entertaining footage of the band is rare footage of the live shows themselves. Also included is a film by William Morrisson who hit the road in America and Europe to shoot this documentary called "Information Warfare". This documentary addresses the key issue behind the project. The butal result of American foreign policy. William visited former Attorney General Ramsey Clark in N.Y.C., he travelled to Capitol Hill in Washington to speak with the Gulf War Veterans resource centre and enlisted the help of Iraqi filmmaker Duraid Mujanim who travelled to Iraq with camera's after the recent occupation began. He travelled to Paris to interview Medicine Sans Frontiers and Kutna Hora near Prague to shoot the famous Bone Church at Sedlec. And finally there are a few more film segments which showcase footage of two more legendary Puppy tours. "Too Dark Park" and "Last Rights". These shows were filmed in 16mm by Jim Vanbebber (Charlie's Family and "Spasmolytic" video clip). ""
4 personas de un total de 4 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- The Bonus Features were the best part
The live show from last year that is on disc one does have its editing problems and that is a disappointment. But I am glad to have gotten to seen it either way(even though I saw them live on this tour). I dont believe for a second though that they lip sync. You would have to pay extra attention to the fact that the audio doesnt quite sync up with the video cause for the most part it is on key. They are for the most part a very professional, if not theatrical act. The real treat was the footage from the Last Rights, Too Dark Park, and ViViSectIV tours. That was great. Lots of travels and backstage stuff...the boys also knew how to party heh. It was good to see Dwayne Goettel too before his untimley passing. Skinny Puppy was a trio, and it was good to see the original band playing and touring together so this footage was much appreciated...aside from all the camera spinning/time warps, but I attribute that mostly to the fact that they were partying most of the time(I mean come on, they were in Belgium, Amsterdam, and such so they had the opportunity heh). But yeah enough of that. Bottom line, this performance was nowhere near as good as Aint It Dead Yet, so if you dont have any Puppy DVD's yet then start with that cause that show is a gem. That and I really wasnt fond of their latest album and hearing the songs live from The Greater Wrong Of The Right wasnt all too impressive...the rest of the song selection was good though, a lot of songs from ViViSectVI, and even two from The Process. All in all a great performance and a welcome return to the forefathers of electronic/industrial. Buy it if you have their other two DVD's. Skinny Puppy are still a great band even today and I hope to see another album done in their classic sample-ridden distorted glory!
15 personas de un total de 20 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Kicking the habit
Before their reunion tour last fall of 2004 it had been a while since we heard anything from Canadian industrial legends Skinny Puppy. Their 1996 release "The Process" flopped and was all but forgotten by anyone but the most ardent Puppy fans. Simply put the band had not released anything worthwhile in 13 years, since 1991's "Last Rights". Then came 2004's "The greater wrong of the right". It was admittedly a different Skinny Puppy, more polished, dancey and catchy this time around but still undeniably the SP sound and a welcome return to form. On the strength of that album, the band went on their first tour in years and wowed a new generation of Puppy fans who were too young to see them in their halcyon days.
Disc one of this package combines the best elements of the tour's Montreal and Toronto shows in a 110 minute DVD. The show opens up with "Downsizer", frontman Nivek Ogre strangely absent from the stage. Then on track #2 "L'immortal" Ogre finally bursts on stage in an absolutely insane-looking costume and the fun begins. From then on the band rip through classic track after classic track such as "Warlock", "God's Gift Maggot", "Tin Omen" and closing it out with the most classic track of all, "Smothered Hope". Ogre is truly a sight to behold throughout the whole show, drenched in sweat and mud and blood and puss, screaming his head off like a mad banshee and looking no less energetic than he was in the band's prime years.
I attended the Toronto show myself and I can honestly say this was one of the best shows I've ever seen. What really struck me was the band's ability to put the audience in a trance, hypnotizing us with eye-popping images on the projector screen, flashing lights and creative stage theatrics. I know all of Skinny Puppy's material and was sober (relatively so) that night yet it wasn't even about the music, the whole vibe of the show and the histrionics involved made me feel like I was having some sort of out-of-body experience. If you were there too, you know what I'm talking about.
Disc#2 opens up with a 30-minute documentary entitled "Information Warfare" about some of the devastating effects the war on Iraq has had on the Iraqi populace, as well as the American soldiers involved. It's an interesting and well-made segment supported by eye-popping images and statistics although some of it comes across as Michael Moore-style propaganda. I also couldn't help but wonder why it's even in there in the first place. Skinny Puppy has never been an outwardly political type of band so why would they assume that its fans would be interested in watching something like this in the first place? Plus let's not forget Skinny Puppy are Canadian so their constant Bush-bashing rings a bit hollow. But then again maybe that's just me, I've never been a fan of musicians, movie actors and other celebrities force-feeding their political opinions on fans.
The highlight of the second disc (and perhaps the whole package) is the 15 minutes of rare archival footage of the Too Dark Park and Last Rights tours, filmed by Jim Van Bebber (The Manson Family, Deadbeat at Dawn) and friends. Although disc#2 is overall a bit of a mixed bag, this set remains absolutely essential for fans of the band. It's about time we were treated to live Skinny Puppy on DVD, aside from the excellent but unfortunately almost impossible to find "Ain't it dead yet" DVD. Brap on!
4 personas de un total de 5 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Great Live Show
Personally, I think it's better than Ain't It Dead Yet. The video and audio is so much better and I like the more energetic performance and theatrics throughout. Peeking at the Litany forum today I noticed people talking about some of the editing choices in AIDY. It appears that when they show Dwayne doing his thing it's not even footage that's taking place at the same time as the performance. So pretty much both live releases suffer from some of those same oddities. Anyway, onto the extras. The documentary, Information Warfare, is a bunch of info I already know such as some of the testing that goes on with US troops who are shot up with experimental vaccinations such as the anthrax vaccine. It also deals with some of the issues of depleted uranium and how this material is being used in Iraq. It also deals with how the government and the media just aren't giving a very good picture of the harsh realities of war and its effects on Iraqi civilians. They try to present this information in a less left or right wing sort of way that networks such as Free Speech TV are guility of doing so I applaud them for doing something that's a little less hyperbolic than others that deal with the issues. Problem is it's just nothing new to me and I wish they would have presented some shocking tidbit I've never heard before or just left the documentary out entirely and provided more live footage. Eurotrauma is basically footage of the band on tour in 1986 and shows them goofing around, getting cheated out of money by venue owners, and going to the local hash bars in Amsterdam. The last two bonus features are the Last Rights and Too Dark Park tour footage. Basically, this footage runs for only a few minutes. TDP only lasts as long as one song, Spasmolytic. LR only runs as long as the song, Love In Vein. I was kind of disappointed in this because I really wanted to see a lot of footage from these tours but what footage was in there was really cool nonetheless. Disk 1 uses up about 3.65 gigs of data. Disk 2 uses 2.80. They could have fit a little more on disk 2 since a DVD can hold up to 4 gigs. Sadly they didn't. Regardless of that it's a great buy and I think the best of the two live DVDs.
1 personas de un total de 1 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- I felt like I was there at the concert.
Well, almost. The seats were good and I drank straight out of the bottle. The DVD wasn't what I thought I had purchased but I'm not at all unhappy about getting it. Very, very, very good quality audio/video and I don't mind watching it often.
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