[rockumentary] Music/Band History : Must Have DVDs!
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Description :
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The term rockumentary is a neologism denoting a program on television or a movie documentary about rock music or its musicians. It is a portmanteau of the words "rock" and "documentary." The term was used by Bill Drake in the 1969 History of Rock & Roll radio broadcast, and by Rob Reiner in the 1984 mockumentary film This Is Spinal Tap.
... idr 25.000 per DVD ...
... exclude shiping fee ...
... DVD format (1 dvd, 1 film) ...
... english sub, or no sub (import mostly) ...
... high quality disk ...
... low speed burning ...
... no cover, no label, with box ...
DVD list :
1. Rock N Roll : History of Rock n Roll music (5 dvds)
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This 10-part documentary mini-series traces the history and evolution of rock and roll music, from its rhythm and blues, country, gospel and jazz roots in the early 1950's, through the advent of folk rock, soul, psychadelia, heavy metal, glam, funk, punk, and reggae, to the emergence of rap in the early 1990's, it's all here in this 5 disc set.
PBS ROCK AND ROLL
Episode 1: The Renegades
After World War II, black music was mostly still segregated. They had their own radio stations, and their independent record labels were putting out blues music.
Episode 2: In the Groove
Lieber and Stoller and other song writers like Carol King were situated at the Brill building in NY writing hits for black singers.
Episode 3: Shakesperes in the Alley
Bob Dylan was becoming a major star. His lyrics hit a chord with other musicians, and his style was widely adopted. Across the Atlantic.
Episode 4: Respect
Berry Gordy Jr. started his own record label Motown. Motown grew quickly within few years to be the major force in the pop industry as artists and songs were all selected on the basis of having crossover potential.
Episode 5: Crossroads
Records of blues men like Muddy Waters found its way by ways of merchant seamen to port cities which influenced young kids like Eric Burdon, Keith Richards, Mick Jagger, Brian Jones, Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton in a major way.
Episode 6: Blues in Technicolor
San Francisco was the Mecca for the drug culture and San Francisco bands like the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane found its way into rock's mainstream.
Episode 7: The Wild Side
Theatrical rock was coming into the scene with them and another cross dressing pop star David Bowie.
Episode 8: Make it Funky
James Brown starts a new type of rhythm and blues called Funk which carries a big beat on the first note of the bar. Funk music finds its roots in black music as Sly Stone and others join the Frey.
Episode 9: Punk
The Ramones, Blondie, and the Talking Heads all had their start at the CB GB's. The scene influences a clothing store owner from Britain who took some of this idea back to London and presented at his shop.
10 years after the wave of Punk music, another type of music from the streets called the "Grunge" takes shape in America.
Episode 10. The Perfect Beat
In New York, dance music scene was going strong. A local DJ later named Grand Master Flash finds out that if he played certain portions of the record repeatedly, crowd will get excited.
2. Black Sabbath : Black Sabbath Story (2 dvds)
3. Live Forever : Rise and Fall of British Pop Music
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Live Forever: The Rise and Fall of Brit Pop is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by John Dower. The documentary is a study of popular culture in the United Kingdom during the mid to late 1990s. The focus of the piece is British popular music (Britpop), which underwent a resurgence during the mid-1990s and then seemingly retreated with similar haste towards the end of that decade.
The political landscape of the time also features. Much is made of Tony Blair and New Labour's efforts to align themselves with the distinctly British cultural resurgence that was underway. The documentary features a number of prominent UK musical and artistic figures, but relies heavily on contributions from Noel & Liam Gallagher of Oasis, Damon Albarn of Blur and Jarvis Cocker of Pulp. Other contributors include 3D from Massive Attack, Louise Wener from Sleeper, fashion designer Ozwald Boateng and modern artist Damien Hirst.
4. Joy Division : The History
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Joy Division is a 2007 British documentary film on the British rock band Joy Division, directed by Grant Gee.
The film discusses the lives of the band and the time they formed. Late '70s Manchester, with its crumbling sewers and cancer infected concrete blocks, was to see a revolution on the same scale as the industrial one that shaped it. This band is shown here as the pioneers of modern Manchester. From humble beginnings to a tragic end, this movie gives new Joy Division and New Order fans a well rounded explanation of the music and the men, and is a treat for long standing admirers.
5. The Clash : Westway To The World
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The Clash: Westway to the World is a 2000 documentary film about the British punk rock band The Clash. In 2003 it won the Grammy Awards for the best long form music video.
Directed by Don Letts, the film combines old footage from the band's personal collection filmed in 1982 when The Clash went to New York with new interviews conducted for the film by Mal Peachey of members Mick Jones, Paul Simonon, Topper Headon, and Joe Strummer and other people associated with the group.
6. Kill Your Idols : Experimental Noise Music
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If documentaries such as 'Punk Rock Movie','The Decline Of Western Civilization','D.O.A:A Rite Of Passage',etc told the unvarnished truth of late 1970's/early 1980's Punk Rock,and carried over to later day rock docs such as 'Hardcore Underground U.S.A.' & '1991:The Year That Punk Broke', Scott Crary's 'Kill Your Idols' goes beyond & tells the tale of the late 70's,early 80's "No Wave" post punk noise scene in New York City. When Punk threatened to become homogenized into "New Wave" by the early 80's,a scene rose,Phoenix like,from the near wreckage of Punk to become "No Wave". It was the musical answer to a form of neo Dadism,where bands such as DNA,Sonic Youth,The Swans,Scraping Foetus Off The Wheel,to mention but a few,scraped & scratched a Freddy Kreuger like glove across the Cerebral Cortex of audiences at venues such as CBGB's,Max's Kansas City,etc.,pretty much until the end of the 80's/early 90's,when the scene seemed to implode upon itself (although some of the participants,as most of them preferred to not think of themselves as musicians, still played around at one point or another). Kill Your Idols tells it's sordid story in two parts. The first half of the film tells it's tale from the original mainstays of the No Wave scene (we get first hand testimony from the likes of Lydia Lunch,Thurston Moore,Lee Ranaldo,Michael Gira,J.G. Thirlwell,Arto Lindsay,and others),while the second half is a commentary of the next wave of N.Y.C. noise bands that are currently packing the clubs (the Yeah,Yeah,Yeahs,as well as others). What do the original denizens of the noise scene have to say about all of this? Find out for yourself. Scott Crary,besides directing this outstanding,albeit scathing rock doc, also photographs & edits. Well worth seeking out if you're a fan of early,as well as later day Punk Rock,Experimental,Avant Garde,Noise,New Music,etc. Not rated by the MPAA,but contains pervasive strong language & a bit of quasi-pornographic footage from some of the New York underground films of Richard Kern,Nick Zedd,etc. that is not for innocent eyes.