The Doobie Brothers - Live At Wolf Trap DVD Review

Talk about wanting to kick yourself in the ass! There I was, this spring,making my annual decision of which summer concerts to attend. Rush?Check. Yes & Dream Theater? Oh hell yeah! Styx & Peter Frampton? Why not. The Doobie Brothers at Wolf Trap? I only live about a half-hour from the place, but, damn, I've already spent all of this money on these other tickets. Let me think about it. Then, before you know it, the pavilion seats were all sold out, and it was too late. It sure as hell would have been nice to know back then, that they were FILMING THE CONCERT FOR A DVD--THAT I WOULD BE REVIEWING!!! I think I might have scrounged up the money if I would have been in on that little fact.

A few months ago I had just reviewed The Doobie Brothers' excellent Rockin' Down the Highway DVD--their 1996 concert to benefit The Wildlife Conservation Society--and liked it enough to add it to my 2004 Top Ten list. I ended that review saying that the only thing that could top this would be a DVD recording of their next concert tour, since Rockin' was more a TV special than an actual concert.. Low and behold, we now have Live At Wolf Trap, from their 2004 summer tour. I didn't know my reviews were so influential (LOL atmyself). I have since replaced Rockin' with this slightly more satisfying DVD on the top ten list.

Live At Wolf Trap includes 23 songs, spanning The Doobies entire 30-plus year career. The majority of the songs are from their seminal early-70's output, including five songs each from the classic Toulouse Street and The Captain & Me albums of 1972 and 1973. The only remotely new material that gets performed are two songs, "People Gotta Love Again" and "Five Corners", from their last studio album, 2000's Sibling Rivalry, and "Dangerous" from 1991's Brotherhood album, which to me is still "new" Doobies' music. Understandably, you do not get much of the Michael McDonald-era songs, since his unique vocals make the songs so distinct. They do perform a highly improvised version of "Takin' It To The Streets", with Pat Simmons and, bassist, Skylark taking turns on the lead vocals. The song begins with an impressive extended keyboard intro by Guy Allison, and ends with some great sax. They almost steer completely clear from the Minute By Minute album, one of my favorites, and only break out the blue-grass, instrumental "Steamer Lane Breakdown", only referred to as "Steamer Lane", on the DVD. I would have loved to have heard Simmons' "Dependin' On You" or "Don't Stop To Watch The Wheels" from that great album. Don't fret, you can see great performances of "Minute By Minute", "What A Fool Believes", and "Takin' It To The Streets" with McDonald on the Rockin' DVD, as well as McDonald' s A Gathering Of Friends DVD, which featured a guest appearance by The Doobie Brothers.

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Article Author: Paul Roy

Paul Roy is a system administrator by day and amateur music DVD critic by night. When not attending as many live concerts as he possibly can, Paul likes nothing more than to kick back with a good concert DVD and rattle some walls. …

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  • 1 - Steve

    Jul 31, 2006 at 1:57 am

    You can download the single of People Gotta' Love Again and, at the same time, benefit the promotion of Sustainable Development by UNESCO by typing UNESCO in the iTunes search engine. You will see 3 UNESCO CDs and their contents, including People Gotta Love Again. Nicely mastered version as you can hear from the free excerpt. A portion of the net roceeds from that download also benefit the San Francisco School District Performing Arts program for music programs promoting sustainable development. See pourlaterre.org for all the details.

  • 2 - Jeff

    Jun 08, 2007 at 5:40 pm

    I have to respectfully disagree with Roy's description of the camera switching:

    >>> The camera changes were never too quick and allowed you to soak in the show, without getting dizzy from too many camera edits.

    At many points, the jump-cuts occurred on every downbeat. Sometimes even more often...in such rapid-fire succession that it was impossible to tell what the camera was showing.

    I got physically ill from watching...and the Doobies are my favorite band of all time! I had to turn it off, just because the guy on the video mixing board was button-happy.

    I know that I'm an old fart, and this is the "new" short-attention-span way of video editing. But just like the "twist and swoop" camera work that was popular a few years ago, viewers just won't put up with it.

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