Rating: Summary: "GIMME" IS A GREAT "UP-CLOSE" LOOK AT JOHN LENNON IN ACTION. Review: "Gimme Some Truth" is a great quality (sound and picture) DVD which will excite both die-hard and casual fans. Yoko and crew did a great job cleaning up this nearly 30 year old footage and having it sound so good on DVD as well. The tracks are first rate John Lennon from his biggest selling solo album. This is a nice companion piece to the remastered "Imagine" CD which was released at the same time. "GST" shows you up-close and personal of John at work and play in 1971. Sure some footage we have seen a million times (the "Imagine" video and the loner who "searches" for John whom the Lennons invite in for breakast)but the quality here is very high as this is John Lennon's first solo release on DVD. I only wish that the very underrated rocker "I Don't Want To Be A Soldier" was given more than just a minute clip (which was lifted from the "Power To The People" music video. These are small qualms for 1 hour of enjoyment. The bonus DVD features are nice add-on's and a nice way to look over the entire John Lennon solo catalog. Here's to more John Lennon on DVD real soon!
Rating: Summary: "GIMME" IS A GREAT "UP-CLOSE" LOOK AT JOHN LENNON IN ACTION. Review: "Gimme Some Truth" is a great quality (sound and picture) DVD which will excite both die-hard and casual fans. Yoko and crew did a great job cleaning up this nearly 30 year old footage and having it sound so good on DVD as well. The tracks are first rate John Lennon from his biggest selling solo album. This is a nice companion piece to the remastered "Imagine" CD which was released at the same time. "GST" shows you up-close and personal of John at work and play in 1971. Sure some footage we have seen a million times (the "Imagine" video and the loner who "searches" for John whom the Lennons invite in for breakast)but the quality here is very high as this is John Lennon's first solo release on DVD. I only wish that the very underrated rocker "I Don't Want To Be A Soldier" was given more than just a minute clip (which was lifted from the "Power To The People" music video. These are small qualms for 1 hour of enjoyment. The bonus DVD features are nice add-on's and a nice way to look over the entire John Lennon solo catalog. Here's to more John Lennon on DVD real soon!
Rating: Summary: A must-have... Review: ...but you have to go pick up the Imagine album first. This DVD documents the making of the landmark 1971 album, opening with a jam session and ending with a very satisfied John Lennon listening to the finished product of the title track.From start to finish, you'll think you're in the recording studio with John, George, Klaus, and Phil. That's how good the picture and sound is, although there understably are a few scratches in the video here and there, but the footage is superb, considering that most of it has been in the can for almost thirty years. Watch for a snide John playing "How Do You Sleep" on the piano for George Harrison for the first time. That alone is worth the price of the DVD.
Rating: Summary: Clearly the best beatle Review: A great video. It is amazing to see John actually recording the tracks that I had heard all these years. His charisma and charm come through clearly in this "documentary". Great footage and as you can clearly see (and hear) a great voice. A must for any music fan.
Rating: Summary: An interesting look at the making of a record Review: Although this video carries much of the same information as "Imagine," it is an interesting look into the process of making a record, and also an interesting look into John and Yoko's post-Beatles life. Illuminating also is the footage of Phil "wall of sound" Spector working with John Lennon. One imagines he's about the only producer John would never try to intimidate because of his reputation for greatness (along with Sir George Martin - a completely different personality). A few things are obvious from this video: John hated Paul McCartney at that time, George Harrison, working with John, couldn't have been fond of Paul for joining John's camp, John was going through a lot of pain, Yoko continually stuck her nose in every facet of John's life (where it sometimes did not belong - she knows nothing about music), John had a warm side that came out when dealing with the downtrodden (such as the poor soul who slept in his garden one night just to meet John), and there was an enormous amount of wealth surrounding the Lennons. Big house, fancy car, rich friends, etc. John comes off looking pretty good; one has to remember how young he was and how much pressure was on him to be what others expected. All in all this is a very good video and a must for Beatles/Lennon fans to watch.
Rating: Summary: An interesting look at the making of a record Review: Although this video carries much of the same information as "Imagine," it is an interesting look into the process of making a record, and also an interesting look into John and Yoko's post-Beatles life. Illuminating also is the footage of Phil "wall of sound" Spector working with John Lennon. One imagines he's about the only producer John would never try to intimidate because of his reputation for greatness (along with Sir George Martin - a completely different personality). A few things are obvious from this video: John hated Paul McCartney at that time, George Harrison, working with John, couldn't have been fond of Paul for joining John's camp, John was going through a lot of pain, Yoko continually stuck her nose in every facet of John's life (where it sometimes did not belong - she knows nothing about music), John had a warm side that came out when dealing with the downtrodden (such as the poor soul who slept in his garden one night just to meet John), and there was an enormous amount of wealth surrounding the Lennons. Big house, fancy car, rich friends, etc. John comes off looking pretty good; one has to remember how young he was and how much pressure was on him to be what others expected. All in all this is a very good video and a must for Beatles/Lennon fans to watch.
Rating: Summary: geared to the casual fan AGAIN Review: As with almost every archival Beatles-related release, this is another product that tries to straddle the line of being for the collector and the casual fan both (leaving neither really happy with the end result). Once again they have erred on the favor of the casual fan, who will not be the one buying the majority of this release. Capitol/EMI never seem to learn from the great bootlegs how to compile really good releases. If you have Imagine (the videos film), and Imagine (the documentary film), and Yoko Ono Then and Now, and the John Lennon videos collection, then you already have more of THIS video than you SHOULD have. The NEW stuff in this video is GREAT! Where is the rest of it? I could have gone for way more recording scenes, this hardly shows George playing, no King Curtis, no Badfinger. Just enough to tease us, then back to more recycled footage. Obviously these people filmed everything they did almost all the time, so why do we have to keep seeing the same scenes over and over again in each (NEW?) product. I am all for putting things in context, but the old stuff makes the basis for this dvd, not the new stuff. Just enough is left out of each product that you have to buy all of them, but once you have them it's pretty redundant. Of course the casual fan is not going to care because they will only see one of the versions, but for the rest of us this is getting really old. They also took the cheap way out and left in all the dust, hairs, scratches, and streaks in the video too, rather than cleaning it up like Yellow Sub. And, unlike Yellow Sub, the 5.1 soundtrack is not that big of a deal musically, and not that sonically different from the cd remaster. The extra interview is nice, since they went out of their way to make that complete. I just wish as much thought would have gone into the main feature. Do you need this? Yes. If it's the only Lennon video you have, you'll probably be pretty happy, and it's much better than the videos version Imagine. If you have all the others, you still need this because there is just enough new to re-sell you the old again.
Rating: Summary: Great and Excellent sounding DVD! A must have! Review: Don't be fooled by reviews that you have seen this stuff before. I have personally seen only about 5% of this footage before. A small amount of the footage has been seen on the 1988 theatrical release of IMAGINE, however, those parts are greatly expanded upon in this DVD. The sound is incredible to listen to in 5.1 surround sound especially with headphones on as I am listening to it now. It truly makes you feel as if you are hearing the CD for the first time and the video only makes you appreciate the songs even more. The only negative portion is when Lennon seems extremely impatient during the background vocals of OH YOKO. His temper is soaring and Phil Spector looks as if he would rather be somewhere else. However this is important to see because it shows that creating art is not an easy task and keeping your temper intact is a tough one to master even by this master. If you don't have this DVD you are missing an important link into knowing Lennon.
Rating: Summary: Imagine ... more scenes Review: First I thought carefully whether or not to get the DVD since I already had the video, the movie "Imagine" on Video as well as the film "Imagine" with the songs to the album, but this is something completely different again ... plus stunning bonus material. First of all most of the songs are - as the title suggests - part of the making off of the album imagine, they are rough cuts ... at one point John Lennon complaining that the technician has to change tape in the middle of the track. Secondly, the sequence including George Harrison is much longer than on the other videos and one can watch him play the electric guitar. Furthermore we get a very short glimpse of Jack Nicholson, Miles Davis and Andy Warhol - all pitching up at Ascot. The Video/DVD contains a short snap of an interview sequence ... and that's one hell of a nice Bonus track which contains the entire interview ... partly with a black screen due to the change of filmreels, the tape has to be changed as well, but during the entire filming a second tape appears to be recording so that the interview remains completely intact. I'd say a must for any person interested in The Beatles. J.P.Wilbrand
Rating: Summary: Yoko looking fine! Review: For the first time I can see what John must have seen in her. Yoko's looking fabulous in this!
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