高清电影在线选片-会员面板

高清电影在线选片-注册成为会员 高清电影在线选片-帮助

影片库

搜索影片

  • 齐柏林飞船:西部开拓史演唱会 加入选片库

    齐柏林飞船:西部开拓史演唱会(2018)

    分类:MV&演唱会 类型:

    年代:2018 地区:欧美

    片源:2D高清 分辨率:蓝光原盘 格式:BDMV 编码:HEVC

    容量:22.9GB 字幕:无字 音频:非国语

    影片编号:MD095 人气:5 更新日期: 2018-11-19

    标签:

影片简介

Personnel:
John Bonham – drums, percussion, backing vocals, co-lead vocals on "Bron-Yr-Aur Stomp"
John Paul Jones – bass guitar, double bass, bass pedals, keyboards, mandolin, backing vocals
Jimmy Page – acoustic and electric guitar, mandolin, backing vocals, production
Robert Plant – vocals, harmonica

Tracklist:
1 LA Drone 0:14
2 Immigrant Song 3:41
3 Heartbreaker 7:24
4 Black Dog 5:40
5 Over The Hills And Far Away 5:07
6 Since I've Been Loving You 8:01
7 Stairway To Heaven 9:37
8 Going To California 5:37
9 That's The Way 5:53
10 Bron-Yr-Aur Stomp 4:50
11 Dazed And Confused 25:25
12 What Is And What Should Never Be 4:39
13 Dancing Days 3:41
14 Moby Dick 19:23
15 Whole Lotta Love 23:07
16 Rock And Roll 3:55
17 The Ocean 4:19
18 Bring It On Home 9:29

On September 7, 1968, John Bonham, John Paul Jones, Jimmy Page, and Robert Plant first took the stage together in Gladsaxe, Denmark. Then billed as "The New Yardbirds," the band would assemble in the studio for the first time later that month to start recording their debut album as Led Zeppelin, and rock 'n' roll would never be the same again. Before the band's 50th Anniversary celebration officially begins in September, Led Zeppelin will continue their reissue campaign with a new edition of their celebrated live album How The West Was Won, originally released in 2003, featuring newly remastered audio, which was done under the supervision of Jimmy Page. Details of additional Led Zeppelin 50th Anniversary releases and events will be announced later this year.

For years, Led Zeppelin fans complained that there was one missing item in the group's catalog: a good live album. It's not that there weren't live albums to be had. The Song Remains the Same, of course, was a soundtrack of a live performance, but it was a choppy, uneven performance, lacking the majesty of the group at its peak. BBC Sessions was an excellent, comprehensive double-disc set of their live radio sessions, necessary for any Zeppelin collection (particularly because it contained three songs, all covers, never recorded anywhere else), but some carped that the music suffered from not being taped in front of a large audience, which is how they built their legacy -- or, in the parlance of this triple-disc collection of previously unreleased live recordings compiled by Jimmy Page, How the West Was Won. The West in this case is the West Coast of California, since this contains selections from two 1972 concerts in Los Angeles: a show at the LA Forum on June 25, and one two days later at Long Beach Arena. This is the first archival release of live recordings of Zeppelin at their peak and while the wait has been nigh on interminable, the end result is certainly worth the wait. Both of these shows have been heavily bootlegged for years and while those same bootleggers may be frustrated by the sequencing that swaps the two shows interchangeably (they always prefer full shows wherever possible), by picking the best of the two nights, Page has assembled a killer live album that captures the full, majestic sweep of Zeppelin at their glorious peak. And, make no mistake, he tries to shove everything into these three discs -- tight, furious blasts of energy; gonzo freak-outs; blues; and rock, a sparkling acoustic set. Like always, the very long numbers -- the 25-minute "Dazed and Confused," the 23-minute "Whole Lotta Love," the 19-minute "Moby Dick" -- are alternately fascinating and indulgent, yet even when they meander, there is a real sense of grandeur, achieving a cinematic scale attempted by few of their peers (certainly no other hard rock or metal band could be this grand; only Queen or David Bowie truly attempted this). But the real power of the band comes through on the shorter songs, where their sound is distilled to its essence. In the studio, Zeppelin was all about subtle colors, textures, and shifts in the arrangement. On-stage, they were similarly epic, but they were looser, wilder, and hit harder; witness how "Black Dog" goes straight for the gut here, while the studio version escalates into a veritable guitar army -- it's the same song, but the song has not remained the same. That's the case throughout How the West Was Won, where songs that have grown overly familiar through years of play seem fresh and new because of these vigorous, muscular performances. For those who never got to see Zeppelin live, this -- or its accompanying two-DVD video set -- is as close as they'll ever get. For those who did see them live, this is a priceless souvenir. For either group, this is absolutely essential, as it is for anybody who really loves hard rock & roll. It doesn't get much better than this. --AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

 

image

image image image image image image image image image image image image

返回顶部 返回顶部