Red Hot Chili Peppers - So Much Live (2013)  
  Video: NTSC, MPEG-2 at 4 685 Kbps, 720 x 480 (1.778) at 29.970 fps | Audio: AC-3 2 channels at 320 Kbps, 48.0 KHz 
 Genre: Rock | Label: Access All Areas | Release Date: 3 Jun 2013 | Runtime: 113 min. | 4,29 GB (DVD5)  Live performance from rock band Red Hot Chili Peppers, recorded in July 2011. 
 The concert features songs such as 'Scar Tissue', 'Californication' and 
 'By the Way'. 
 Few rock groups of the '80s broke down as many musical barriers and were 
 as original as the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Creating an intoxicating new 
 musical style by combining funk and punk rock together (with an 
 explosive stage show to boot), the Chili Peppers spawned a slew of 
 imitators in their wake, but still managed to be the leaders of the pack 
 by the dawn of the 21st century. The roots of the band lay in a 
 friendship forged by three school chums, Anthony Kiedis, Michael 
 Balzary, and Hillel Slovak, while they attended Fairfax High School in 
 California back in the late '70s/early '80s. While Balzary and Slovak 
 showed great musical promise (on trumpet and guitar, respectively), 
 Kiedis focused on poetry and acting during his high-school career. 
 During this time, Slovak taught Balzary how to play bass, while the duo 
 encouraged Kiedis to start putting his poetry to music, which he soon 
 did. Influenced heavily by the burgeoning L.A. punk scene (the Germs, 
 Black Flag, Fear, Minutemen, X, etc.) as well as funk 
 (Parliament-Funkadelic, Sly & the Family Stone, etc.), the trio 
 began to rehearse with another friend, drummer Jack Irons, leading to 
 the formation of Tony Flow & the Miraculously Majestic Masters of 
 Mayhem, a quartet that played strip bars along the Sunset Strip during 
 the early '80s. It was during this time that the four honed their sound 
 and live act (as they stumbled across a stage gimmick that would soon 
 become their trademark -- performing on-stage completely naked, except 
 for a tube sock covering a certain part of their anatomy). By 1983, 
 Balzary had begun to go by the name "Flea," and the group changed its 
 name to the Red Hot Chili Peppers. 
 Word spread quickly about the up-and-coming band, resulting in a 
 recording contract with EMI. But before the Chili Peppers could begin 
 work on their debut, Flea and Kiedis were dealt a disappointing blow 
 when both Slovak and Irons announced that they were leaving to focus 
 more on another band they were in, What Is This. With replacement 
 members Jack Sherman (guitar) and Cliff Martinez (drums) filling in, the 
 Peppers released their self-titled debut in 1984. But the absence of 
 the two original members showed, as the album failed to capture the 
 excitement of their live show. While the album didn't set the world on 
 fire sales-wise, the group began to build a dedicated underground 
 following with college radio buffs. By 1985, What Is This were kaput 
 (after issuing a single self-titled album) and Slovak and Irons returned 
 to the Peppers, resulting in the George Clinton-produced Freaky Styley. 
 While the album was an improvement over its predecessor, it still 
 lacked the fire of the band's in-concert experience, a problem that 
 would finally be solved with their next album, 1987's The Uplift Mofo 
 Party Plan. The album was the group's first to make an impression on the 
 charts, and they followed it up a year later with a stopgap five-track 
 release, The Abbey Road EP, in 1988. But just as the world was warming 
 up to the Peppers, tragedy struck when Slovak died from a heroin 
 overdose on June 25, 1988. 
 In the wake of Slovak's death, Irons left the group for the second and 
 final time, while Kiedis (who was also battling drug addiction at the 
 time) and Flea decided to soldier on. After a new lineup featuring 
 former Parliament guitarist Blackbyrd McKnight and former Dead Kennedys 
 drummer D.H. Peligro didn't work out, the duo found worthy replacements 
 in newcomers John Frusciante and Chad Smith. The new-look Chili Peppers 
 hit pay dirt straight away, as their first album together, 1989's 
 Mother's Milk, became a surprise hit due to MTV's exposure of their 
 videos for a cover of Stevie Wonder's "Higher Ground" and a song about 
 their fallen friend Slovak, "Knock Me Down," as the album was certified 
 gold by early 1990. The bandmembers knew that their next release would 
 be the most important one of their career, so they moved into a 
 mansion-turned-recording studio with producer Rick Rubin to work on what 
 would become their most successful release yet, the stripped-down Blood 
 Sugar Sex Magik (their first for the Warner Bros. label). The album 
 became a monster hit upon its September 1991 release (eventually going 
 on to sell a staggering seven million copies in the U.S. alone), as it 
 spawned such hits as "Give It Away" and the group's first Top Ten 
 single, "Under the Bridge." 
 But not all was well in the Chili Peppers camp. Like his predecessor, 
 Frusciante had become addicted to hard drugs, and abruptly left the band 
 mid-tour in early 1992. Undeterred, the band enlisted new member Arik 
 Marshall, and headlined Lollapalooza II in the summer. When the band 
 returned to the studio to work on its sixth release overall, it quickly 
 became apparent that Marshall didn't fit in, and he was replaced by 
 Jesse Tobias. But before Tobias could record a note with the group, he 
 was handed his walking papers as well, and former Jane's Addiction 
 guitarist Dave Navarro signed on. After a layoff of four years, the 
 Peppers' much delayed follow-up to BSSM was released in 1995, One Hot 
 Minute. While the album was a sizable hit, it failed to match the 
 success and musical focus of its predecessor, as it became apparent 
 during the album's ensuing tour that Navarro wasn't fitting in as well 
 as originally hoped, and he left the band in early 1998. 
 After Frusciante had left the group, he released a pair of obscure solo 
 releases, 1995's Niandra Lades and Usually Just a T-Shirt and 1997's 
 Smile from the Streets You Hold, yet rumors circulated that the 
 guitarist was homeless, penniless, and sickly with a death-defying drug 
 habit. After checking himself into rehab and putting his demons behind 
 him, Frusciante emerged once again refocused and re-energized, and 
 promptly accepted an invitation to rejoin the Peppers once more. The 
 group's reunion album, 1999's Californication, proved to be another 
 monster success, reconfirming the Chili Peppers as one of alternative 
 rock's top bands. The band put in a quick guest appearance on Fishbone's 
 Psychotic Friends Nuttwerx before hitting the road to support the 
 album. The following months found the band getting involved in bizarre 
 situations and controversies. First, their refusal to play songs from 
 One Hot Minute during the tour was an unpopular decision with some fans 
 and a sore spot for Dave Navarro. Next, they re-ignited a personal feud 
 between Kiedis and Mr. Bungle singer Mike Patton by refusing to play a 
 series of European concerts with Bungle. Patton responded with a 
 "tribute" show for the Peppers, where Bungle mocked their stage moves, 
 faked shooting up heroin, and imitated Kiedis' comments about Patton. 
 They also played the ill-fated Woodstock '99 festival, where their 
 headlining performance was met with piles of burning rubble and a 
 full-scale riot. Tours with the Foo Fighters and Pearl Jam brought them 
 into the next year without problems, but they stepped off the road after 
 a planned stop in Israel was halted due to security worries. They 
 returned to the studio in November of 2001 and by the summer of 2002 
 they had a new album ready to drop, By the Way. Warner Bros. released a 
 Greatest Hits compilation in 2003, followed by a chart-topping two-CD 
 album of all-new material, Stadium Arcadium, in 2006. 
 After an extensive supporting tour, the Red Hot Chili Peppers took an 
 extended hiatus and the members pursued individual interests. Flea began 
 studying music theory at USC and played in a variety of side projects. 
 Kiedis attempted to turn his autobiography, Scar Tissue, into a 
 television show. Smith joined Sammy Hagar, Michael Anthony, and Joe 
 Satriani in the party supergroup Chickenfoot. Frusciante released The 
 Empyrean in 2009, by which time he left the band. His replacement was 
 Josh Klinghoffer, who played secondary guitar on the Stadium Arcadium 
 tour. Klinghoffer's first album with the band, I'm with You, was 
 released in late summer of 2011.  
Tracklist:  01. Intro Jam 
 02. Can't Stop 
 03. Dani California 
 04. Scar Tissue 
 05. Havana Affair (Ramones Cover) 
 06. Readymade 
 07. Throw Away Your Television 
 08. Songbird (Fleetwood Mac Cover) 
 09. Snow (Hey Oh) 
 10. This Velvet Glove 
 11. Emit Remmus 
 12. So Much I 
 13. She's Only 18 
 14. Don't Forget Me 
 15. Californication 
 16. By The Way 
 17. Chad+Josh Drum Solo+Flea's Trumpet 
 18. Soul To Squeeze 
 19. Power Of Equality 
 20. Final Jam  
Features:  - Interactive Menu 
 - Direct Scene Access  
  
  
  
  
  Download:  (5% restore - links are interchangeable)  
Disponible sólo a los usuarios