Description
Meet the Beatles
Beatles Come to Town, Royal Variety Show, More
$19.99
Playhouse Theatre – London 10/16/63 ITV News
London Airport 10/31/63
London 11/4/63
Royal Variety Show 11/4/63
This Week – London 11/5/63
In Town – Dublin Airport 11/7/63
Portsmouth 11/12/63
Beatles Come To Town! 11/20/63
CBS News 11/21/63
The Morcambe and Wise Show 12/2/53
It’s The Beatles – Empire Theatre, Liverpool 12/7/63
Lucky Stars on Merseyside 12/16/63
ITV News, London 12/20/63
Jack Parr Show 1/3/64
Paris France, Olympia Theatre 1/16/64
Promotional Videos – Please Please Me (3 Takes), I Want To Hold Your Hand
Meet the Beatles
Beatles Come to Town, Royal Variety Show, More
Beatlemania was exploding in America in August 1964 as the Fabs embarked on their first proper U.S. concert tour. This stop, in Los Angeles for their Hollywood Bowl performances, was filmed by newsreel companies, local TV stations and others and is one of the best documented concert stops on their 1964 US tour.
Queen: The Magic Years is a video trilogy chronicling the success of one of Britain’s most popular bands, Queen. The Foundations fuses archive footage, interviews, and never-before-seen studio clips to unfold the story of the group’s formation in 1971 and its development and achievements through the mid-’70s. Highlights include clips of Queen’s first Rainbow concert and other early career benchmarks. This volume features commentary from Elton John, Little Richard, Roger Daltrey, Keith Richards, Phil Collins, Rod Stewart, Jeff Beck, Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, and David Bowie. Other segments explore the group’s noted work in music video, and its techniques.
This fly-on-the-wall documentary follows the Rolling Stones on their 1972 North American Tour, their first return to the States since the tragedy at Altamont. Because of the free-form nature of filming, Cocksucker Blues captured band members and entourage members taking part in events the Rolling Stones preferred not to publicize. It can only legally be screened with director Robert Frank in attendance. The title of the film is the same of that of a Rolling Stones song (aka Schoolboy Blues), which was written to complete the band’s contractual obligations to Decca Records and specifically to be unreleasable.
The Revenge Tour was a concert tour by Kiss supporting band’s album Revenge. It was the first tour with drummer Eric Singer, replacing Eric Carr who died of cancer on November 24, 1991. The Detroit, Indianapolis and Cleveland shows were recorded for Kiss’ first live album in 16 years, Alive III.
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