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| A Concert for George | 
enlarge | Director: David Leland Actors: Andy Fairweather-low, Ray Cooper (ii), Sam Brown (ii), Albert Lee (ii), Olivia Harrison Studio: Rhino Records Category: DVD
List Price: $29.98 Buy Used: $12.39 You Save: $17.59 (59%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 342 reviews Sales Rank: 4544
Format: Anamorphic, Color, Compilation, Dolby, Dts Surround Sound, Dvd-video, Live, Ntsc, Widescreen Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Portuguese (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled) Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Number Of Items: 2 Running Time: 286 Discs: 2 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.6 x 0.7
MPN: 603497024124 UPC: 603497024124 EAN: 0603497024124 ASIN: B0000CEB4V
Theatrical Release Date: November 18, 2003 Publication Date: 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Exceptionally moving but not the least bit sentimental, Concert for George is a splendid tribute to the late George Harrison, whose contributions to the Beatles were so often hidden in the long shadows of John Lennon and Paul McCartney. A year to the day after Harrison's November 29, 2001 death, Eric Clapton assembled some musicians--people who had played with Harrison and known him intimately, including McCartney, Ringo Starr, and Tom Petty--to perform his music at London's Royal Albert Hall. They take on not just the predictable ("My Sweet Lord" and "Something," beautifully sung by Billy Preston and Sir Paul, respectively), but also lesser-known fare like "Old Brown Shoe" and "Beware of Darkness," all to superbly empathetic effect. But the tune most likely to make you misty-eyed is "While My Guitar Gently Weeps," which brings together three of the five musicians who played on the original recording: Ringo on drums, Clapton replicating his own classic solo, and McCartney playing piano and harmonizing with Clapton's lead vocal. Concert for George enjoyed a brief theatrical release, but even those who caught it on the big screen will delight in this two-disc DVD edition. Disc 1 features the complete concert (sans interview and rehearsal footage, but with a few additional songs and in the original running order), while disc 2 contains the theatrical version and some additional backstage and photo material. All in all, a beautiful piece of work. Wish you were here, George--but man, what a way to be missed. --Sam Graham
Product Description A tribute to George Harrison under the musical direction of Eric Clapton. Genre: Music Video: Concerts Rating: NR Release Date: 18-NOV-2003 Media Type: DVD
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| Customer Reviews: Read 337 more reviews...
Simply one of the best concerts ever -- great tribute! January 19, 2005 70 out of 81 found this review helpful
I am an avid Beatles fan and I was just blown away by the concert.
A. The Performances
Great musicians and friends/collaborators of George: Eric Clapton, Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty, Billy Preston, Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, etc. do an outstanding job and everyone of them put their heart and soul into the songs of George Harrison and make them come alive. It is eerie, but when you listen to Clapton singing "While My Guitar Gently Weeps," Paul McCartney singing "All Things Must Pass," or Billy Preston singing "My Sweet Lord," you could sense the presence of George as they're singing! Their renditions of Harrison's songs were just as masterful as George singing them. Those 3 songs stood out to me.
Some other musical highlights:
1) Ringo Starr's touching rendition of "Photograph" (the words take on a completely new meaning in this tribute) and "Honey Don't."
2) Anoushka Shankar's beautiful sitar playing accompanying Jeff Lynne's rendition of "The Inner Light."
3) Joe Brown's tender covers of "Here Comes the Sun" and "I'll See You in My Dreams."
4) Dhani Harrison's acknowledgement and thanks to all the musicians playing.
5) Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr playing together for the 1st time live in over 40 years!!! And they seem to be having a good time!
6) Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and their exciting performance of "Taxman" and spot-on re-endition of "I Need You."
7) Billy Preston's enthusiastic singing of "My Sweet Lord"
8) The funny song "Lumberjack" by Monty Python which really lightened up the crowd and the occasion.
B. The Editing
I also liked how the DVD focussed its shots mostly on the musicians performing the songs, rather than panning to the audience and then back to the musicians. (This back and forth between the musicians and then the audience is a very annoying feature which plagues the Paul McCartney "live" DVDs).
C. The Unique Layout of the Discs
This movie is organized in an interesting fashion:
Disc 1 features the whole complete concert ( 2 hr 26 min) -- you cannot do any chapter or song selections.
Disc 2 is the theatrical version (2 hr 20 min) -- these are songs from the concert rearranged in order and backstage/ rehearsal scenes/ interviews of the musicians are interspersed within the songs. You can do scene / chapter selection for Disc 2.
D. Some Reservations
Even though the "Lumberjack" song was very funny and lightened up the occasion, I didn't care for the song "Sit on My Face" or the mooning of the audience when the Python members bared their rear-ends to the audience. I felt this dampened the whole respectability and dignity of the whole concert.
Summary:
That aside, I highly recommend this DVD. The performances are outstanding; the picture and sound quality are excellent. If you're a Beatles fan and a fan of George, you'll love this DVD! A must-have! One of the best concert DVDs you can get!
George! March 20, 2004 45 out of 49 found this review helpful
The concert event had the chance to be sappy and morose. Thank God, it isn't. Instead, it's a lot of George's friends covering his songs, having fun doing it, and otherwise doing what they've always been doing.Summary: Great guests, superior musicianship. Buy This DVD. Now. The show opens with a few words from Clapton, who introduces Ravi Shankar and his daughter. They play a fair amount of Indian music. It's pretty good, I have to admit, though not my cup of tea. One word - Ravi Shankar's daughter is quite the sitar player... She plays a piece and violates at least 2 rules of physics. Amazing. Then the Western band forms up. They play a number of songs, with luminaries being introduces and added to the band over the course of the evening. Highlights, in no particular order: 1) Ringo :-) During "Honey Don't" Look for Albert Lee. His solo is blistering though short. 2a) Clapton on "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" 2b) Clapton having the class to not play all the solos thereby making it the "Eric Clapton Show." Instead most of the real guitar work is being done by someone I don't know. I think it's Clapton's long-time guitarist. My son and I call him "THE Guy". 2c) Clapton in general 3) Watch Tom Petty's guitar player get OWNED by George on "Taxman". Tom does this song kinda weird, it's probably the weakest track. 4) Sam Brown. What a voice! 5) Waa Waa. Amazing. 6) Something by Paul, via uke. 7) Ravi's daughter and her sitar. Your eyebrows will fly up! 8) Dhani has George's spooky eyebrow thing going on. 9) Jeff Lynne is there, and takes an active part doing what he does best. Bob Dylan is notably absent. Every track is worthwhile and many are superb. And while a lot of similar productions are muddy and horrid, this isn't. Eric is running the show, and keeps it moving and clean. The only dings I give this production are 1) The "behind the scenes" footage is too sparse. I know there had to me more... 2) The band isn't introduced well enough. I expected a close up of every performer, with a hello, and a name. See 2b) above.
Alone with George October 25, 2003 44 out of 52 found this review helpful
I, too, went to see "Concert for George" and was the only one in the theater. It was a bit unnerving but completely enjoyable. I can't understand why this wasn't publicized more, since it was such a sincere tribute by such outstanding artists. It was also moving to see his son playing guitar all through the performance. Ringo and Paul also were there, sadly reminding us that they were the only 2 Beatles left. The movie was not shown again. I hope it comes out on VHS. I would certainly buy it.
One of the Great Concert Films January 12, 2004 29 out of 29 found this review helpful
"Concert for George" (2003) deserves an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It's a beautiful work that should be seen by anyone who appreciates popular music. The spiritual artistry of the late George Harrison leaps from the screen in this moving tribute concert at the Royal Albert Hall - captured for posterity by director David Leland and cinematographer Chris Menges. The highlights are plentiful: heartfelt performances by Eric Clapton, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty, Billy Preston and the underrated Sam Brown; the Monty Python reunion; Anoushka Shankar's stunning orchestration of "Arpan"; and Joe Brown's touching farewell, "I'll See You in My Dreams." In all, a transcendent celebration of Harrison's life and music.
Concert for George - unforgettable classic October 9, 2003 24 out of 26 found this review helpful
Having had the privilege of seeing the actual concert featuring Jeff Lynne, Paul McCartney, Joe Brown, Ringo Starr, Tom Petty, Eric Clapton, Dhani Harrison, Billy Preston, Jules Holland acccompanying Sammy Brown in George's last release before his death- a blow-you-away performance of "Horse to Water - an unexpected treat, MOnty Python (with Tom Hanks featured), Ravi Shankar and his amazing daughter Anoushka as well as the film, I can tell you that both are uniquely enjoyable. The DVD will give the advantage of providing both, one on each disc.Do see it in the theater if you can, for that big-screen, being-there effect, but try to catch it in a theater with decent sound! I saw it in two theaters, one with surround (sounded fabulously realistic) and one with a sytem pathetically inadequate to the subject. The film and DVD were mastered by muscican/producer extraordinaire Jeff Lynne, who pays great attention to detail to produce perfect sound, so if you saw it in a less-than-wonderful theater, know that the DVD will sound fantastic on a decent system. Also, while the film wonderfully interjects short interviews and scenes from rehearsals, etc., which are quite enjoyable, know that the actual concert is longer and you can see it in its totality on the second disc. It will surely touch your heart - lots of love projected - and DO stay for the end credits for something you won't want to miss.
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