Am I The Only Person Who Bought That Galaxie 500 DVD?

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Am I boring?

scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 00:20 (twenty-one years ago)

I have it, and I love it.

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 00:24 (twenty-one years ago)

i'm trying to get hold of it locally at the moment

purple patch (electricsound), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 00:25 (twenty-one years ago)

2 live versions of 'Ceremony"!

scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 00:25 (twenty-one years ago)

the bootleg of the show at the point is my favorite - they rock out! no small feat for galaxie 500! the videos are really beautiful, too. i never would have guessed from the crappy CD-ROMs that come in the box set. wow.

a spectator bird (a spectator bird), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 00:52 (twenty-one years ago)

I always loved the videos for blue thunder and fourth of july. I remember being really excited taping them off of mtv at the time. i had never seen the vids for tugboat and when will you come home though.

scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 00:58 (twenty-one years ago)

Really great stuff -- picked it up shortly before my Venezuela trip. As a Special Sneak Preview, this is my review which will be in the All-Music Guide:

Thanks to the comprehensive box set and the Copenhagen live album, Galaxie 500’s recorded work is as documented as it can get – but in an inspired move, relying both on the band’s own archives and contacts found via fans on the Internet, the Plexifilm DVD company assembled this comprehensive two-disc collection of video footage, concert and otherwise, from the band’s four years together. The actual videos themselves – four in total, directed by Dean Wareham’s Harvard classmate Sergio Huidor – would have been worthy for a brief DVD on their own. Huidor’s apparently simple but effective blend of handheld close-ups, warm smeared colors, interspliced found footage that both comments on the lyrics and plays against the atmosphere with often violent results and more gave the band an immediately identifiable visual identity, with the negative-image of “Blue Thunder” and the frenetic collages of “Fourth of July” in particular standing out. That’s only the starting point of disc one, though, with the rest given over to professional and semi-professional footage from five different shows, two in Boston (including their first paying show ever, with the nerves both audible and visible), two in San Francisco and one in LA, plus a UK TV appearance and interview. The show snippets themselves nicely capture the evolution of the band’s sound and will interest hardcore fans enough on their own, especially given that most, thanks to band producer Kramer’s efforts as soundman, sound wonderful no matter the recording conditions or club PA. One can readily hear the interplay between the three members resulting in longer and more involving performances from show to show, with highlights including excellent takes of “Blue Thunder,” “Summertime” and particularly “Don’t Let Our Youth Go to Waste” in San Francisco and “Ceremony” in Los Angeles. That said, visually it’s very much a mixed bag, with late eighties video technology, often murky club lighting and the band’s static stage presence meaning that many of the performances almost feel better simply heard rather than seen – ultimately the club footage is a well-intentioned souvenir, not a gripping sound-and-vision experience. The UK appearance is an interesting diversion, though, featuring Damon Krukowski having exchanged drums for guitar and including a grand take on the Velvet Underground’s “Here She Comes Now,” while the amusingly awkward interview has Wareham often looking bizarrely demonic thanks to a dark lighting scheme. The second disc, meanwhile, consists of two complete shows from 1990, in London and Atlanta. As with the other footage, the sound is fine (much more for the Atlanta show, though), and the sets and performances are different enough to make them nice complements – a touch ragged and drunken in Atlanta, but with fantastic performances of “Don’t Let Our Youth” and “When Will You Come Home,” more straighforward in London, with “Fourth of July,” an absolutely fantastic “Summertime” and “Melt Away” and, in her one vocal turn on the set, Naomi Yang’s lead on “Listen, the Snow is Falling” as the highlights. As with the club footage, though, visually there can be problems, especially since both come from audience bootleg cameras. For Atlanta the handheld quality results in long spans where nothing can be seen and a generally queasy feeling when trying to watch, while the London show, if more stably filmed, is at a greater distance from the stage and suffers from noticeable graininess. Instead of a commentary track as such, there’s a fine interview with all three members regarding all the footage conducted by James McNew, Yo La Tengo bassist and early Galaxie 500 obsessive, included in a booklet along with a slew of archival photos. Anecdotal and well-spirited, it’s a nice contrast to the circumstances of the band’s demise, and presumably puts the final seal on the group’s efforts – unless murmured rumors of a reunion come to pass.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 00:58 (twenty-one years ago)

Nice job, Ned! Thanks for that. I like that first show at the Middle East. It's cute. They look and sound like the great lost Sarah Records band. The progression is amazing though. They just got better and better. Stronger, you know? I don't usually indulge in "what if", but one more studio album would have been a fine, fine thing.

scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 01:08 (twenty-one years ago)

you could be right. "lunapark" and the first D&N album feel like they contain a lot of stuff that was written for (and was of equal quality to) G500. the same cannot be said of their subsequent works.

purple patch (electricsound), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 01:18 (twenty-one years ago)

I confess that I gave up on Luna. I feel a little bad about it. Don't hit me, but I have never even heard penthouse which people loooooove to death. I've been meaning to pick it up, but.... I love More Sad Hits to death, but yeah, i guess you could say that diminishing returns fits the bill. I really really wanted to love the collab with Ghost!!!! I really did. And I think I've played it all of 3 or 4 times. The Luna fans will probably come out of the woodwork now, so I'll go hide.

scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 01:23 (twenty-one years ago)

And I still want to hear the Sonic Boom remix thing. Cuz Sonic is my lord and saviour, but....again with the but...but, you know, i only have so much money, you know?

scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 01:24 (twenty-one years ago)

I know Spencer's a big fan of the covers album Dean released last year, as is Elvis T., who says that the last Luna show he saw was really great. Matos is a massive fan of Penthouse!

As for Damon and Naomi -- you know, bless their hearts, I keep running into them (indirectly) at Terrastocks, and the actual set at T4 they did with Ghost was really grand, but their sets in general...well, One of the Regular Performers at Terrastocks who I know and I were talking briefly before their Saturday night performance at T5. I noted Damon and Naomi were playing next and the Regular Performer said, "Oh, you mean the naptime set?" Then again, that was precisely why I was leaving to go find dinner.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 01:27 (twenty-one years ago)

More Sad Hits is really lovely.

scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 01:31 (twenty-one years ago)

There are really fanatical fans of Penthouse. This I have learned over the years.

scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 01:32 (twenty-one years ago)

Which is really sorta funny because I much prefer Bewitched, to me a near perfect album.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 01:37 (twenty-one years ago)

I have it and it's wonderful.

Bewitched seconded!!

ddb (ddb), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 01:41 (twenty-one years ago)

damon and naomi always manage one or two really pretty songs per otherwise-bland album, so i find myself perpetually undecided about how i feel. most recently i've liked "turn of the century" (playback singers) and "eulogy to lenny bruce (with ghost). i was at T5, ned, and their set was actually quite sweet - a rest for the shredded ear drums, anyway.

i've loved every luna album up to and including the oft-maligned "pup tent" - but then they lost me, and i can't really imagine that anything they do again will excite me half as much as bewitched, penthouse, or the slide ep.

still, none of it touches any of the galaxie 500 records.

a spectator bird (a spectator bird), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 02:18 (twenty-one years ago)

I d/l'ed G500 London and Atlanta shows off slsk a few months ago ... I'm assuming these are shows on the DVD. The former show closes with an ultra-slow, desperate-sounding "Temperatures Rising" which I can't get enough of, and the latter with a fantastic run through "Ceremony". Meow.

Thanks for posting your review, Ned, I enjoyed reading it!

Barry Bruner (Barry Bruner), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 04:04 (twenty-one years ago)

I d/l'ed G500 London and Atlanta shows off slsk a few months ago ... I'm assuming these are shows on the DVD.

The Atlanta one almost certainly -- the London one must be another gig, as the DVD show ends with "Here She Comes Now" (there is a version of "Temperature's Rising" included but it's from a Massachusetts show. And you're welcome!

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 04:06 (twenty-one years ago)

Which is really sorta funny because I much prefer Bewitched, to me a near perfect album.

I'm the odd one out here because I vastly prefer Pup Tent - a near perfect album!

Also, that Damon & Naomi & Kurihara DVD is worth checking out.

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 06:08 (twenty-one years ago)

"Bewitched" is the only one I love from start to finish. Once Stanley and Justin left and Dean was forced to write his own songs, sans Justin, the music floundered for a bit, but I think the group's upcoming album may be their best since "Penthouse." Ironic, since it features some of their worst lyrics. But what else is new in Luna land?

Josh in Chicago (Josh in Chicago), Tuesday, 3 August 2004 12:25 (twenty-one years ago)

three weeks pass...
frankly Ned, that other thread I just started was merely an excuse to note the resemblance.

Gear! (Gear!), Wednesday, 25 August 2004 17:16 (twenty-one years ago)

i havent bought it yet, but i am guessing i was there for some of it

kephm, Wednesday, 25 August 2004 17:23 (twenty-one years ago)

how is the audio on the live tracks?

kephm, Wednesday, 25 August 2004 17:27 (twenty-one years ago)

frankly Ned, that other thread I just started was merely an excuse to note the resemblance.

Yay ski nose! (But why not post the images here?)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 25 August 2004 17:28 (twenty-one years ago)

you're right of course

http://www.filmmusicsociety.org/news_events/features/images/hope_faceshot.jpg

http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B000228SPU.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg

Gear! (Gear!), Wednesday, 25 August 2004 17:30 (twenty-one years ago)

Damon and Bob

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 25 August 2004 17:31 (twenty-one years ago)

one year passes...
just got it and watching now.

Christopher Costello (CGC), Saturday, 13 May 2006 22:30 (twenty years ago)


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