Heart - Alive in Seattle (2003) Video: PAL, MPEG-2 at 5 478 Kbps, 720 x 576 at 25.000 fps | Audio: AC-3 5ch. at 448 Kbps, AC-3 2ch. at 224 Kbps, DTS 5ch. at 755 Kbps
Genre: Rock | Label: Image Entertainment | Copy: Untouched | Release Date: 28 July 2003 | Runtime: 103 min. | 5,40 GB (DVD9) Originally released on DVD in 2003, Heart: Alive in Seattle is part of the opening
salvo of live concert HD DVD releases from Image Entertainment. Alive in
Seattle was recorded on the last stop of the Heart's 2002 "Summer of
Love" tour, and this performance captures the band at their tightest.
The setlist concentrates on Heart's '70s output, with right at half of
the set culled from three of the band's earliest albums. Their most
popular songs "Crazy On You", "Magic Man", and "Barracuda" are present
and accounted for, naturally, as are such popular but less iconic
singles as "Dog and Butterfly" and "Straight On". It seems as if
frontwomen Ann and Nancy Wilson are trying to put the decade that
followed behind them, and Heart's mid-'80s transformation into
pop-balladeers is almost entirely glossed over. Their eponymously titled
1985 album went platinum five times over in the U.S., and of its slew
of hits, only "These Dreams" has made it onto this disc. Ann and Nancy
also perform a stripped down version of "Alone" from their 1987
follow-up, and "Wild Child" is it for Heart's handful of releases from
the '90s.
It's not just a "greatest hits, live!" disc, though. Heart pulls out
several covers, starting with a hard-charging tear through "The Witch",
an early single from fellow Pacific Northwestern rockers The Sonics.
Nancy Wilson apparently shares her husband's taste in music; "Mona Lisas
and Mad Hatters" is that other song of Elton John's prominently
featured in Cameron Crowe's Almost Famous, and it makes an appearance
halfway through the set. Heart had frequently been likened to Led
Zeppelin early in their career, and Alive in Seattle is bolstered by a
pair of Zeppelin covers: "The Battle of Evermore" and "Black Dog".
Four newly penned songs make it into the set as well: "Sister Wild
Rose", "Heaven", "Two Faces of Eve", and "Break the Rock". The pre-song
banter continually mentions that these would appear on an album that
they were on the verge of recording, although I don't believe any of
them made it to "Jupiters Darling" when that CD was eventually released.
The newer material is alright; there's not a "Barracuda" for the new
millenium in there or anything, but they don't bring the performance to a
grinding halt, and sometimes that's good enough.
Despite an emphasis on crunchy guitar-rock, the band also spends around a
third of the set with sparse, acoustic instrumentation, focusing on
Nancy's nimble fretwork and Ann's powerful vocals. With "Mistral Wind"
and "Heaven" as bookending segues with the full band, the remainder of
this stretch of the performance is purely anchored around Ann and Nancy.
The power ballad "Alone" is performed with just a single acoustic
guitar and subdued keyboards, for instance, and "The Battle of Evermore"
retains the acoustic guitar and mandolin instrumentation of the
original Zeppelin recording.
Tracklist: 01. Crazy on You
02. Sister Wild Rose
03. The Witch
04. Straight On
05. These Dreams
06. Mistral Wind
07. Alone
08. Dog and Butterfly
09. Mona Lisas and Mad Hatters
10. Battle of Evermore
11. Heaven
12. Magic Man
13. Two Faces of Eve
14. Love Alive
15. Break the Rock
16. Barracuda
17. Wild Child
18. Black Dog
19. Dreamboat Annie
20. End Credits
Extra: - Photo Gallery
Features: - Direct Scene Access
- Interactive Menu
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