Inside the Music - Classic Rock (DVD Audio)
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2 new or used available from $55.00
Average customer review:Track Listing
- Bad to the Bone - George Thorogood & the Destroyers
- Rebel Yell - Billy Idol
- Green-Eyed Lady - Sugarloaf
- When The Night Comes - Joe Cocker
- Heartbreaker - Pat Benatar
- Everybody Wants You - Billy Squier
- Centerfold - J. Geils Band
- Change - John Waite
- My Town - Michael Stanley Band
- Time Won't Let Me - The Outsiders
- On The Road Again - Canned Heat
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #312188 in Music
- Released on: 2001-02-13
- Format: Enhanced
- Original language: English
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
During the 70s and 80s, decades when rock and roll was as much a religion as a style of music, some of the most memorable songs of all time graced the radio. This Classic Rock record, from Silverline's Inside The Music series, features a selection of those legendary performances remixed into stunning DVD Audio six-channel sound. A breathtaking listening experience breathes new life into classic rock favorites.
Features include: Plays on ALL DVD Players Stunning six-channel "surround sound" audio Supports DVD-Audio (24 bit/ 96kHz) Dolby Digital and DTS formats More than twice the quality of today's CD whether played through stereo or six-channel surround Artist Photo Gallery Can be enjoyed as an audio experience alone, or in conjunction with a TV to access the video content
Customer Reviews
great tunes but a mixed bag on quality
Take a look at the liner notes on this release. There are several different engineers remastering these songs into 5.1 channels. The results are uneven at best and really bad at worst. It is an unsettling experience to hear some tracks really rock in all six channels, then the next track might have very little high end (Bad to the Bone), then the next track might have only ambient sound in the surrounds whereas other tracks place instruments in them. If you get this DVD-Audio release (and you still ought to), DON'T listen to it all the way through...partial out the songs, listen to a couple at a time. If not, you may leave this one on the shelf for a long time as the wide varying mastering techniques tend to fatigue the listener...you simply cannot get into a groove.
Classic Rock : An Uneven Disc
This DVD-Audio disc is a collection of rock music from the EMI/Capitol/Chrysalis collections. It includes 11 tracks, such as George Thorogood's "Bad to the Bone", J. Geils Band's "Centerfold" and Billy Idol's "Rebel Yell". 5.1 channel mixes are presented in 96kHz 24-bit PPCM, DTS and Dolby Digital. The 96kHz mix can be automagically mixed-down to stereo on most DVD-Audio players.
I wish I could say this is a excellent mix. Unfortunately, the first three tracks ("Bad to the Bone", "Rebel Yell" and to a lesser extent "Green-Eyed Lady") suffer from a loss of high-end treble and extra LFE/SB. Compared to Warner Music DVD-Audio discs, the LFE channel levels are extremely high.
On the plus side, once track 4 starts, this is a very listenable disc. The mixes are consistent even though they were done by five engineers. Surprisingly, the 1960's "Time Won't Let Me" by The Outsiders sounds very good given the source material. The cheesy organ music sounds like, well, very clean cheesy organ music.
The highlights from a mix standpoint may be "Centerfold" and "On the Road Again" by Canned Heat (never thought I'd write that!).
The disc has the usual DVD-Audio problems - long time skipping between tracks. On early DVD-Audio players, you'll see (but thankfully not hear) the Silverline promo before the music. The Pioneer Elite DV-38A plays the music before any promo and without the need for menu selections (no video required).
The disc does contain still photos of the various bands. These photos will sequence as the music plays. Quite frankly, I just want to hear the music and don't really care about the "video extras".
In any event, if the first three tracks were mixed properly, this would be a five. With the lousy mixes included, particularly "Bad to the Bone", it's really a three and a half - closer to a four. Let's hope they did better on the recently released "Inside the Music : New Wave".
Great starter for DVD-audio
DVD-Audio kicks! I've been reading alot about this new media. At first, I thought that this was a lot of hype. A means by which the big heartless record companies could jerk out more money to make people pay for their sins with Napster. This new media cost about 18 to 25 dollars a pop. Intriged by the multi-channel aspect, and encouraged by the fact that it would run on my existing DVD setup, I purchased three DVD-A's. The Corrs, The Blue Man Group and a classic rock compilation. Woooow! Believe me, you have not heard music at home before! What really floored me was the classic rock. You hear things in familiar songs that you've never heard before. The depth...the impact...the details. It's undescribable! So often I've heard how sound from a C.D. sounded sterile or brassy or lacking life or warmth. I've never understood that until now. If any one runs across about 800 bucks that they don't know what to do with...I would like to make a recomdation.



