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The Strat Pack DVD |
Released May 2005, by Eagle Vision
The Miller Strat Pack concert, on
24th September 2004, which featured Pink Floyd guitarist David Gilmour
alongside a whole host of top musicians at the London Wembley Arena,
was a charity event. The concert alone raised £175,000 (around
US$330,000), and this DVD, reviewed here, is expected to swell this
figure dramatically, as it is also being sold in aid of the charity.
The concert was edited and mixed
into full surround sound in David Gilmour's home studio, the Astoria
houseboat, by David himself and Andy Jackson. It is a whopping two and
a half hours long - the main aspect that has been edited out is David
Jensen's onstage introduction of the artistes, along with a few tracks
from some of the lesser performers on the bill.
The show features a broad range
of different guitarists. There are obvious omissions from the line-up -
no Eric Clapton, no Jeff Beck (a last minute cancellation) - but that's
a small quibble. The performances throughout are strong enough that all
thoughts of what might have been are banished.
The DVD cover features the true
star of the show - and no other. The glossy 10 sided insert includes
more pictures of Strats, pictures and quotes from the participants
(including David Gilmour), and credits.
Gary Moore
Paul Rodgers
The DVD is presented in
anamorphic widescreen, and I must say the picture quality is stunning.
The screen shots here do it little justice - a crisp, sharp, colourful
picture throughout - wonderful. The recording was overseen by former
Hipgnosis partner, Aubrey "Po" Powell, and shot in high definition. And
it shows.
Turning to the sound, you get
three choices - Dolby Digital 2.0, DD 5.1, and a DTS soundtrack. The DD
2.0 is very good indeed, but if you have surround sound go for the 5.1
or DTS soundtracks - the surround mixes are sensible ones, placing you
in the hall, with suitable use of the rear channels.
Having said that, if your
equipment can cope with DTS, there is little to say apart from it is
THE essential choice! It sounds far superior to the 5.1 soundtrack on
our equipment. Overall, the sound is lovely - punchy, crystal clear,
thoughtfully arranged - it transported me back to that September night
when I was fortunate enough to be in the audience for the show.
Joe Walsh
Phil Manzanera
The concert starts with some of
the earliest Fender users - The Crickets, who used to be fronted by one
Buddy Holly. Albert Lee and Queen's Brian May help out in places - and
do so elsewhere in the show, too. Next up, Hank Marvin, who starts with
the curiously titled "The Rise and Fall of Flingel Bunt", but finishes
with the familiar "Apache".
Scandinavian performer Theresa
Andersson (with the help of Albert Lee) performs some country tinged
tunes, in memory of Leo Fender, a big C&W fan. The distinctive
vocal of Paul Carrack teams with a curiously lacklustre Mike
Rutherford, for a journey through "How Long", "All Along The
Watchtower", "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" and "I Can't Dance" (a very
strange choice).
Facial acrobatics then go into
overdrive, with Gary Moore giving Hendrix's "Red House" his all - a
great performance, if a little distracting visually...
The second half of the show
started with a definite lull, with pianist Jamie Cullum and soul
artiste Amy Winehouse. Thankfully, both are edited down to one song
each. Cullum's inclusion I guess is justified to an extent with his
bass player using a Fender Precision Pro - he is obviously quite
talented and a good enough, if unremarkable, performance.
As for Amy Winehouse, it was the
wrong audience for her type of music. From where I was in the hall, I
heard heckling (which at one point she seemed to take as praise) which
was not good to hear at a charity show.
Ronnie Wood
David Gilmour
Paul Rodgers gets things rocking
again, with a selection of songs, including his most famous - "Alright
Now", which had Brian May back on stage. "Can't Get Enough (Of Your
Love) followed with Joe Walsh, who then performed a selection of HIS
better known tracks - including "Rocky Mountain Way", "Life In The Fast
Lane" and a great "Life's Been Good".
Phil Manzanera, ex-Roxy Music
guitarist, appears next to perform the sadly little known "6PM", from
the eponymous album, released last year. (The album itself features
contributions from Gilmour, and is worth investigating - see our review). Then, he introduces one of the headline acts of the night - Mr Gilmour himself!
David Gilmour
David Gilmour
Playing the legendary white
Strat, serial number 0001, and worth a fortune (despite clear signs of
plenty of use!) David starts with a sublime "Marooned". The initial
part of the song, before David was warmed up, features a few notes and
chord changes that seemed a little... tricky, but once those fingers
got warmed up, the notes flow fluidly and sweetly.
It was great to hear such a
rarely-played track get a live outing. Some people I spoke to seemed a
little concerned that we'd hear Money, Comfortably Numb, or similar,
yet again. It was so refreshing to hear something different!
David's other selections were a
little more familiar in the live environment - "Coming Back To Life"
and "Sorrow". Both were good readings of these... the eighteen year old
(eighteen!) "Sorrow" being particularly effective at showing the not
necessarily Floydian crowd, David's command of his instrument.
One final performer before the
finale - Ronnie Wood - performing a typically ramshackle "Ooh La La".
All the artistes then returned to the stage for "Stay With Me" - which
if memory serves, was edited in the segment when each guitarist did a
little piece in the song. A nice if unremarkable way to conclude a
great and varied show.
David Gilmour
Finale, with all artistes
Definately a DVD worth snapping
up - with a range of good performances, great picture and sound
quality, and benefitting a worthy charity. What more could you want?
Orders for the DVD, at a healthy discount, are now being taken by Amazon.com, Amazon UK, Amazon.ca (Canada), Amazon France, or Amazon Germany through these special links.
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