DVD Review: Easy Star All-Stars Dub Side of the Moon - Page 2

A number of times the artistic decisions and performances really excel. Jenny Hill’s flute wonderfully recreates Gilmour’s lead into “Time”. “Any Colour You Like” has a great trombone solo by Buford O’Sullivan. Tamar-Kali’s wailing vocals on “Great Gig in the Sky” are masterful. She evokes such power and emotion using Clare Torry’s performance as a template to soar to her own heights. It is the concert’s greatest single performance.

On “Money”, the band really hits their stride. Hill does a very good job on the sax solo. The song comes to a raucous conclusion as Junior Jazz tears it up on guitar while the band jams under him. They smoothly segue into the slow, contemplative “Us & Them”, which along with the following instrumental of “Any Colour You Like” showcases the talented Jeremy Mage on keyboards.

What doesn’t work is DJ Menny More’s rapping during “Time” and “Money”. His thick Caribbean accent and the poor audio mix that finds him blended in with the instruments make him incomprehensible for the most part.

The video is presented in 16:9 Widescreen or 4:3 Letterbox and the audio is 5.1 Dolby Digital, 5.1 DTS and 2.0 Stereo. There’s not much in the way of bonus features — some fans before the show chatting and getting ready, three minutes of samples from the album, and interviews with the artists and producers.

Next up for the Easy Star All-Stars is Radiohead’s OK Computer.

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Article Author: El Bicho

El Bicho writes for a number of movie web sites, including Cinema Sentries, which he runs for the geniuses of Forwerd Media. He also occasionally cleans up around here. Follow at twitter.com/ElBicho_CS

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Article comments

  • 1 - HW Saxton

    Jul 06, 2006 at 2:22 pm

    EB, Nice to see this CD reviewed as it is a great
    and unfortunately a very overlooked piece of work.

    I spoke of this disc here at BC some time back
    (coupla years ago,give or take)trying to spread
    the word on it and I was greeted with an equally
    enthusiastic response. Oh well..................

    Many reggae fans could care less about Pink Floyd
    and vice/versa of course,but this disc sure works
    well.Reggae riddims,Ragga and a touch of Dub plus
    Brit Psych-Pop,wow! Strange bedfellows for sure.

    My hope is that eventually they will do an entire
    follow up to this. A "Dub Side Of The Moon" if you
    will. With different DJ's and producers,the likes
    of Scientist,U-Roy,Mad Professor,Mutabaruka etc &
    so forth doing the entire LP in the same order but
    strictly in Rub-A-Dub stylee.They touched upon the
    idea in the bonus cuts on the disc and I'd like to
    see them expand on the idea at length.











  • 2 - Ray Ellis

    Jul 06, 2006 at 8:18 pm

    We're sympatico on this, El and HW. I would disagree with you on one point,El-- DJ Menny More's toasting (not rapping) is what ties the entire endeavor into an international flavor, and thereby universalizes the entire work.

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