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This was the final concert of The Who's world tour and was
recorded in November 2000 at The Royal Albert Hall in London. The proceeds of
the concert went to the Teenage Cancer Trust and many of the affected teenagers
themselves were present. This obviously did not register on the mind of Pete
Townshend who continually tells the audience to "fuck off". Maybe he's still
trying to play the angry young man, unfortunately it doesn't work at his age.
(Actually I'm surprised anything still works at his age).
Musically this is a problem for me, The Who were always
one of my hero bands of the 60's and 70's and on first listening I thought the
performance was great. I then allowed a friend of mine to take it home for a
good workout - he just happens to be a musician of some standing (or sitting
these days) as he used to play in a band with Bill Wyman of the Rolling Stones.
His critique of the performance was viewed without my rose coloured glasses and
he pointed out the many notes that both Roger Daltry and Pete Townshend failed
to reach. On second listening I had to agree with him.
The addition of various guests in the guise of Nigel
Kennedy, Brian Adams, Noel Gallagher, Kelly Jones, Eddie Veddar and Paul Weller
helped alleviate Townsend's rantings and added a bit of colour to offset the off
colour. Unfortunately, there seemed to be little in the way of rehearsal time
for these guests so the results are not as good as their talents would indicate.
John Entwistle looks as if he'd rather be elsewhere which
is a great waste for the guy voted "Best Bass Guitarist of the Millennium"
His playing is as good as ever but there is little enthusiasm in this
performance and the bass is mixed well back in the overall sound. The drummer is
Zac Starkey (yes, Ringo's son) and applies himself credibly if not as erratic
and exciting as Peter Moon.
As I said, tough call to rate this DVD. The guests spoil
the true "Who-ness" of the concert so you wouldn't buy it as a definitive "Who"
performance. The sound quality is good except the bass is too laid back. Mix is
in Dolby Digital 5.1, DTS 5.1 and PCM Stereo. I've watched it twice and will
probably now relegate it to my pile of DVD prizes to be given away at a later
date.
Audio 4 out of 5
Video 4 out of 5
Content 3.5 out of 5
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