The Who: Tommy and Quadrophenia Live
The Who: Tommy and Quadrophenia Live
| 08 November 2005 (USA)
The Who: Tommy and Quadrophenia Live Trailers

Rhino Records is proud to present a 3-DVD boxed set showcasing one of the greatest live bands ever-The Who. Disc one features a live rendition of their full-blown rock opera about a deaf, dumb, and blind boy. Tommy was performed live in 1989 at The Universal Amphitheatre in Los Angeles, with special guests Elton John, Phil Collins, Billy Idol, Patti LaBelle, and Steve Winwood. Disc two contains the band's second rock opus, this time built around the story of a young mod's struggle to come of age in the mid-60s. This live version of Quadrophenia, from the 1996/1997 U.S. Tour was the first time it was performed as Townshend and Daltrey had visualized it, with live action and featuring a then-unknown Alex Langdon in a spellbinding performance as Jimmy, the disillusioned Mod.

Reviews
navykurt

Okay, maybe it didn't deserve an 8. Critics over the years had panned Quadrophenia in it totality choosing instead to praise certain singles from the opera. In all fairness the plot was somewhat vague and the movie really doesn't do it much justice. With rewrites, tweaking and the technological capability to finally do the show as it was originally envisioned the opera succeeds......as a psycho-drama. it was a psycho-drama all along but people wanted the "big finish" which in the movies case was a decked out scooter over a cliff. In the original opera it doesn't end there.I saw the Quadrophenia tour in '97. The band wasn't much more than speck on the stage. I'll admit that I've been spoiled by punk rocks up close and personal venues. The staging was actually beneficial in that case because i was able to take in the entire presentation. i felt as if the DVD version of the tour end show did a great job tweaking my own memory of finally seeing my all time favorite band.It mixes the show footage and the multimedia stuff quite slickly. I didn't particularly care that you only see the band from the waist up. Pete retired the boiler suit and Doc Martens years ago. All your missing is a sensible pair of running shoes.As for "Tommy"....I've always liked the music though I thought that it was even more incoherent than "Quadrophenia". As I've gotten older I've appreciated the powerful emotions in songs like "Christmas" more as a dad. The father pleas of "Tommy can you hear me?" take on a heart rending urgency in this day and age of increased awareness of disorders like Autism and Aspergers syndrome.However, the movie version from '75 really through a wet blanket over this whole thing for me. If you haven't seen it, it's an all star cluster fcuk. One clever wag pointed out the painfully obvious 1 and a half note range of Jack Nicholsons voice.The live staging of this from 1989 goes along way towards correcting the miscarriage of justice that the movie did to the music. For me the high point of the DVD is Patti Labelle as the Acid Queen. Tina Turner was wonderful in the role. Patti Labelle was mind blowing. She actually out does Turner. Visually she is quite a presences in her almost hallucinatory dress and Matching hair-do. She brings a fiery passion to the lyrics that has an intensity thats breath taking.Turner came off as a charlatan in the role. Labelle's version of the acid queen believes her own b.s.The low point was the Hawker. I'm sorry but Steve Winwood has never convinced me of his sincerity. He was suppose to be a great blue eyed blues man. The trouble is I always felt he was singing from the heart so much that he forgot the guts and the testicles. Maybe it's just me but I felt his performance was bleached out and bland.Elton John....excuse me Sir Elton John sashed onto stage last minute with the band uncertain he was even going to show. They were ready to do the part themselves when Elton John stormed the stage and stole the show. The only thing that would have improved his appearance would have been a 4 foot tall pair of Doc Martens.I haven't mention Billy Idol gleefully chewing up the scenery in both productions. He just makes sense as Cousin Kevin. As the Ace Face he is extraordinary. When I saw his name in the credits at the store I rolled my eyes. But when i saw him in the roll.....evidently he thrives playing a roll nearly as well as Daltrey did.All in all, my high marks maybe adoration for my favorite rock band. I often say that Quadrophenia saved my life. I can promise you this. The DVD set is well worth the money for rock fans and a pittance for fans of the Who.

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Cinema_Fan

Quadrophenia Live: 1996-97 World Tour DVD. Directed by Aubrey Powell and Roger Daltrey. Being a Who fan for over twenty years now, and for the next twenty too, with many Who memorabilia in my collection, such as books, vinyl, videos, DVD's and seeing them live more than once too, I was expecting great things from this package, please read on..I saw the London Hyde Park Quadrophenia gig, travelling down on my motorbike and parking behind the Mayfair Hotel. It really was a great show, but this is something of a completely different show altogether. Having just watched the new DVD Concert of Quadrophenia, released around late 2005, here in England. I am afraid to say that this is the worse recording of a show that I have seen for a very long time.The direction here is terrible, for example, through out the entire show there is only one, and I mean one, angle on the drummer, you see only head and hands. The rest of the group are ninety-eight percent seen from their chest only. You only see Rogers's knees once and Pete's whole body at least twice. Headshots are the order of the day here, what a waste. I do not get this; the band as a whole on stage is only shown about two or three times! Is this a new way of direction? To watch this is very frustrating, you would like to see the whole figure of the Artist, but we are not given the opportunity. When the camera is shooting the actual guitar, for example, there are no heads or legs? It is one or the other. The whole direction seems amateurish to say the least. P.J.Proby looks something like Oliver Reeds Werewolf grandfather from the sixties horror movie The Curse of the Werewolf. With Billy Idol, I feel that if he put on a Leather Jacket, Parka, or a pink dress, he would still be Billy Idol with the same old trademark sneer. The encore fairs up pretty well, with tracks that are more acoustic intermingled with electric rock. Still the one and the same angle shot of the drummer. This no doubt is a great concert, but to see the "whole" event, then I guess you would have to have been there, shame really. As another part of anyone's Who collection then okay, but there are better (DVD) concerts of The Who than this. The Who have always delivered, but today they delivered to the wrong address. By the way, in the booklet that comes with this package the disclaimer states "The Quadrophenia show was only filmed for the bands archive, while the Tommy show was filmed with the intention of being released". I am sorry, but that is not good enough, I don't feel that I should pay £24.99 for an inferior show, surely there could and should have been much better productions along the Quadrophenia Tour? This not a show of Quadrophenia, but a show of single-minded money grabbing incompetence.

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