Description
For the first time anywhere, you can get live, unedited and raw Sweet N Evil videos!
Now you can experience the movement!
$19.99
For the first time anywhere, you can get live, unedited and raw Sweet N Evil videos!
Now you can experience the movement!
For the first time anywhere, you can get live, unedited and raw Sweet N Evil videos!
Now you can experience the movement!
Weight | 24 oz |
---|---|
Dimensions | 11.5 × 9.5 × 1 in |
Show | Escapades 4/28/91, Escapades 5/11/91, Kane Stadium 6/91, 3 Shows 7/91, Studio One 8/25/91, Rock Quarry 12/27/91, Redspot, Marquee 2/92, Redspot 5/1/92, Rock N Roll Cafe 6/20/92, Rock Horse 7/4/92, Club Bene' 7/11/92, Rocker Room 9/26/92, Rock the House 10/21/92, Underworld 10/7/92, Underworld 11/21/92, Rock the House 12/2/92, ??? '92, PAL Showcase 6/93, PAL Benefit 6/14/93, PAL Benefit 5/13/93, Lion's Den 3/19/96 |
200 Motels is a 1971 American-British musical surrealist film cowritten and directed by Frank Zappa and Tony Palmer and starring The Mothers of Invention, Theodore Bikel and Ringo Starr. A soundtrack album was released in the same year, with a slightly different selection of music.
Live Vengeance ’82 is a live DVD and UMD of a Judas Priest concert. It was recorded on 12 December 1982, at the Mid-South Coliseum in Memphis, Tennessee and shown on MTV.
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.
Let It Be is a 1970 documentary film about the Beatles rehearsing and recording songs for the album Let It Be in January 1969. The film features an unannounced rooftop concert by the group, their last performance in public. Released just after the album, it was the final original Beatles release.
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