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Nashville Pussy - Keep on F*ckin' in Paris |
List Price: $19.95
Your Price: $17.96 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: One of the best live bands today does not disappoint Review: I am a big fan of NP, so this may sound biased but this DVD really rocks. Filmed live in Paris, it does a great job of capturing the intensity, sexuality and hedonism of seeing this band live. There are a few moments though where the camera angles did nothing for me. NP roll through all of their big songs and even pay tribute to the "real" AC/DC (Bon Scott era) with a hot cover of "Shot Down in Flames". Bottom line, this is a hot and gritty look at one the best live bands in the world today.
Rating: Summary: One of the best live bands today does not disappoint Review: I am a big fan of NP, so this may sound biased but this DVD really rocks. Filmed live in Paris, it does a great job of capturing the intensity, sexuality and hedonism of seeing this band live. There are a few moments though where the camera angles did nothing for me. NP roll through all of their big songs and even pay tribute to the "real" AC/DC (Bon Scott era) with a hot cover of "Shot Down in Flames". Bottom line, this is a hot and gritty look at one the best live bands in the world today.
Rating: Summary: Hope for rock n' roll Review: Nashville Pussy, along with The Murderdolls, is playing loud, fast, balls-out rock n' roll in an otherwise wimpy world. Real metal is still alive and well, and where it should be, underground. This DVD is a low-budget affair to be sure, no fancy menus, and only a videoclip for "Say Something Nasty" and a photo gallery as extras, but who cares? The Concert is a sweat-flinging, high-decible powerchord fest, down, dirty, and grand. It's filmed in a packed club in Paris, France in 48k pcm stereo and sounds fine, although the box says the sound is 5.1 (it isn't). The performance is a little sloppy at times, and the drums are too low in the mix, but those are small quibbles. Admittedly, some of the visual "Wow" factor has left the building with Corey Park's departure, (The new bassist Katie is solid but boring, think she needs a year or two in Rock Star school), no more fire-breathing or gal-wrasslin, but overall it's well worth the price to see Ruyter's skivvies and Blaines Hootchie-kootchie dance. Pick it up now, and play it loud mutha!
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