| | Samael - Black Trip DVD Samael CDS
(1 Customer Review)
| Category | Heavy Metal DVDs, Rock Movies, Music Video - Rock Videos, Music Video, Pop Music Videos, Music (General), Pop/Rock, Live Performances, Rock And Roll, Live Concerts, Heavy Metal |
Standard Screen; Soundtrack English Recorded live at the Summer Breeze Festival in 2002, and in Poland during the 1996 Passage tour, as well as a bootleg show in Illinois, and a vast amount of extra footage, this lavish package should keep Samael fans thirst for video material well and truly quenched.
Samael - Black Trip | List Price | $17.98 (You save $2.39) | | Studio | Music Video Distributors | | Orig Year | 1996 | | DVD Encoding | Region 1 | | All Time Sales Rank | 30168  | | CD Universe Part number | 5927826 | | Catalog number | 8096 | | Discs | 2 | | Release Date | Jun 17, 2003 | | Rating | Not Rated | | Running Time | 170 Minutes | | Movie Details | Color; Digitally Processed; Two Disc Set |
Samael - Black Trip Movie Review Samael - Black Trip DVD Region 1 Keep Case Full Frame - 1.33 Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
Samael - Black Trip Video Purchase Samael - Black Trip Movie To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Twisted Sister Under The Blade CD (1982) Remastered
Samael - Black Trip film
$12.95 This is the album that started it all for Twisted Sister. With the group's classic lineup complete and producer Pete Way (of UFO and Waysted fame) at the helm, TS put to wax its early club material and in the process came up with one of the greatest hard-rock debuts ever.
"What You Don't Know (Sure Can Hurt You)," with its hypercharged metal riff, has been the band's concert-opener for years. "Bad Boys (Of Rock 'n' Roll)" is a testosterone-fueled singalong with a great hook and lead guitar lick. "Shoot 'Em Down," which received some airplay upon release, features the furious riffs and anthemic qualities that would characterize much of the band's material through the years. "Destroyer" is as heavy as heavy gets, while the title track was singled out by Tipper Gore's P.M.R.C. for being about sado-masochism and bondage (in reality, it's about guitarist Eddie Ojeda's throat operation). "I'll Never Grow Up Now!" is a rebellious teen anthem of independence. UNDER THE BLADE is for all die-hard metal aficionados and for those fans only familiar with "We're Not Gonna Take It."
Principally recorded at The Barn, Kitchenham Farm, Ashburnham, England; I.C.C. Studios, Eastbourne, England; Maison Rouge, London, England.
Personnel: Dee Snider (vocals, background vocals); Eddie Ojeda (guitar, background vocals); "Fast" Eddie Clarke, Jay Jay French (guitar); Mark Mendoza (bass guitar, background vocals); A.J. Pero (drums, background vocals).
Audio ...
| | Paradise Lost Symbol Of Life CD (2002)
Samael - Black Trip review
$9.99 Though the relative merits of Paradise Lost's bizarre transformation from heavier-than-God doom/death metal originators to an alternative rock act delving into gothic electronica remain locked in a fierce debate, there's no sense ignoring two unmistakable facts. First, the band had clearly reached the end of its original direction's tether with 1995's Draconian Times, which, despite its success with fans and solid songs, was little more than a retread of the band's previous album, and arguably career-apex, Icon. Second, while their subsequent sonic experiments have often resembled nothing more than a slightly heavier version of Depeche Mode (complete with singer Nick Holmes adopting a very David Gahan-esque, deadened baritone), the band has proved remarkably resilient in pursuing and defending their chosen career course, of which 2002's Symbol of Life is amazingly the fourth installment. And like the first, 1997's transitional One Second, Symbol of Life may prove the most palatable to the band's disapproving hardcore metal fan contingent. Album highlights such as "Erased," "Perfect Mask," and first single "Mistify" present very adventurous and mostly satisfying contrasts between the very heavy, minor-chord guitar riffs of old and the newfangled electronic elements of recent years. Conversely, songs treading the dreaded middle ground ("Pray Nightfall," "Self-Obsessed") are as irritatingly average and revealing of the group's pop limitations as ever, the tribal drumming heard on the title track proving especially painful. Yet, ...
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| | Iron Maiden - Death On The Road DVDs (2003)
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$14.49 Iron Maiden's live album DEATH ON THE ROAD captured the heavy-metal legends at a stop on their 2003 tour, which promoted both that year's DANCE OF DEATH and the best-of collection EDWARD THE GREAT. Recorded at the Westfalenhalle Arena in Dortmund, Germany, this concert film presents DEATH ON THE ROAD in visual form, with Maiden tearing through newer fare from DANCE OF DEATH as well as older classics like "Can I Play with Madness" and "The Trooper" for a potent showcase of singer Bruce Dickinson's soaring vocals and the band's trademark three-guitar assault.
This 3 DVD package is the companion to the double live CD released in 2005. Filmed in Dortmund, Germany during the 2003 Dance of Death Tour, this collection fully captures the incredible stage production and electricity of an Iron Maiden show. DVD#1 is mastered in PCM stereo; DVD#2 is mastered in 5.1 Surround Sound; and DVD 3 includes bonus extras including a 70 minute ducmentary. ...
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Samael - Black Trip movie DVD
$15.65 This fun family adventure film follows a brother and sister out on a quest to discover what happened to their missing ...
| | What's Up, Tiger Lily? DVD (1966) Widescreen
Samael - Black Trip video
$15.09 WHAT'S UP, TIGER LILY?, Woody Allen's first directorial effort, started life as a low-grade Japanese James Bondian spy drama called KEY OF KEYS. Executive producer Henry G. Saperstein bought the film and hired Allen to dub in an entirely new soundtrack, featuring brand-new dialogue (cowritten by the new voices) that turns the story into a riotously ridiculous search for the perfect egg salad recipe; Saperstein also added scenes with the Lovin' Spoonful to give the film a hip 1960s feel wholly out of touch with what is occurring onscreen. Allen did shoot some new scenes for the film, in which he describes the genesis of the idea and its place in film history, claiming that the first film to do this was GONE WITH THE WIND. The new story features the Japanese cast playing such characters as Phil Moskowitz, Terry Yaki, and Suki Yaki, battling to find out ...
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