George Fest: A Night to Celebrate the Music of George Harrison
- 2016
- 2h 20min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.1/10
97
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaRecorded and filmed on September 28th, 2014 at the The Fonda Theater in Los Angeles, a host of today's best musicians pay tribute to their favorite George Harrison songs.Recorded and filmed on September 28th, 2014 at the The Fonda Theater in Los Angeles, a host of today's best musicians pay tribute to their favorite George Harrison songs.Recorded and filmed on September 28th, 2014 at the The Fonda Theater in Los Angeles, a host of today's best musicians pay tribute to their favorite George Harrison songs.
Fotos
George Harrison
- Self
- (material de archivo)
Opiniones destacadas
Apparently the publicity-starved Conan O'Brien is friends with Dhani Harrison, and he leveraged that into a spot as lead singer on some of George Harrison's songs. Very sad.
The concert starts WITH Conan O'Brien as the lead singer. He sounds like a cat scratching a chalkboard, and he totally ruined Harrison's songs. I honestly could not tell what he was singing, he sounds so bad. I turned it off.
I really like George Harrison, and I loved the Eric Clapton 2002 tribute special, but I could not listen to Conan singing George. Two more completely opposite voices never existed in the history of music and song.
The concert starts WITH Conan O'Brien as the lead singer. He sounds like a cat scratching a chalkboard, and he totally ruined Harrison's songs. I honestly could not tell what he was singing, he sounds so bad. I turned it off.
I really like George Harrison, and I loved the Eric Clapton 2002 tribute special, but I could not listen to Conan singing George. Two more completely opposite voices never existed in the history of music and song.
Cards on the table I am a big George Harrison fan and as one of the participants here says, greatly admire his ability not to mention his determination to establish his songwriting identity and credentials in the considerable shadow of the seemingly all-encompassing partnership of Lennon and McCartney.
This then was the third multi-performer concert film I've watched built around him, the first his own groundbreaking "Concert For Bangla Desh" in 1971 at Madison Square Garden and the second Eric Clapton's star-studded tribute concert at the Royal Albert Hall in 2002.
This evening in L. A., curated by George's chip-off-the-old-block son, Dhani is a much more modest affair, being staged in a comparatively small theatre and certainly with a less starry ensemble singing and playing these Harrisongs. The filming too is less grand and ennobling but I think that works here.
While it starts with a couple of minutes of footage and recorded snippets of the man himself, it then kicks into the song-list, performed as is usual in these things by a very capable house-band with guest artists walking on stage to sing and / or play their designated song. Because I didn't know many of the artists, I was slightly confused as to their identities until they got to speak a few words to the camera after their performance. The camera-work isn't especially flashy or innovative, this ain't no "Stop Making Sense" but in its aim to showcase the music it certainly succeeds.
I knew all the songs and none of the renditions displeased me. There were a handful of what I suppose you'd call big names, Brian Wilson, with Al Jardine is wheeled on and off for a spirited vocal go at "My Sweet Lord" and Ravi Shankar's daughter Norah Jones respectfully takes on "Something" without changing the gender in the lyric, are probably the best known artists but I equally enjoyed the Flaming Lips souped-up version of "It's All Too Much", Ben Harper's delicate take on one of my most favourite songs from the catalogue "Give Me Love" and even Weird Al Jankovic's frenzied run at "What Is Life".
Yes, I missed a few of my favourites like "I Want To Tell You", "You", "Blow Away".and where oh where was "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" but on the whole I thoroughly enjoyed these well-pitched, highly enthusiastic and very entertaining performances of some of my favourite songs and would recommend any other George fans out there to track this down for a look-see.
This then was the third multi-performer concert film I've watched built around him, the first his own groundbreaking "Concert For Bangla Desh" in 1971 at Madison Square Garden and the second Eric Clapton's star-studded tribute concert at the Royal Albert Hall in 2002.
This evening in L. A., curated by George's chip-off-the-old-block son, Dhani is a much more modest affair, being staged in a comparatively small theatre and certainly with a less starry ensemble singing and playing these Harrisongs. The filming too is less grand and ennobling but I think that works here.
While it starts with a couple of minutes of footage and recorded snippets of the man himself, it then kicks into the song-list, performed as is usual in these things by a very capable house-band with guest artists walking on stage to sing and / or play their designated song. Because I didn't know many of the artists, I was slightly confused as to their identities until they got to speak a few words to the camera after their performance. The camera-work isn't especially flashy or innovative, this ain't no "Stop Making Sense" but in its aim to showcase the music it certainly succeeds.
I knew all the songs and none of the renditions displeased me. There were a handful of what I suppose you'd call big names, Brian Wilson, with Al Jardine is wheeled on and off for a spirited vocal go at "My Sweet Lord" and Ravi Shankar's daughter Norah Jones respectfully takes on "Something" without changing the gender in the lyric, are probably the best known artists but I equally enjoyed the Flaming Lips souped-up version of "It's All Too Much", Ben Harper's delicate take on one of my most favourite songs from the catalogue "Give Me Love" and even Weird Al Jankovic's frenzied run at "What Is Life".
Yes, I missed a few of my favourites like "I Want To Tell You", "You", "Blow Away".and where oh where was "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" but on the whole I thoroughly enjoyed these well-pitched, highly enthusiastic and very entertaining performances of some of my favourite songs and would recommend any other George fans out there to track this down for a look-see.
10denis888
George Harrison left this world in 2001, and in 2002 Eric Clapton and a cohort of hugest rock stars made a vast Tribute that is excellent from start to finish. But life goes on, and in 2014 Dhani Harrison made another Tribute - more intimate, but still full of awesome dazzling rock stars who all expressed their love to George and did it very very well. The pristine sound quality and tremendous array of songs make this video a very superb view and never leave you bored or asking. In-between songs snippets are another treat and they add more decent sympathy and a certain level of intimacy to the whole warm and sweet event. Harrison wrote a helluva bunch of great songs, and these artists showed us again how cool GH's music was and is and will be always. Thank you, George, and thank you, Dhani
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Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 800,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución2 horas 20 minutos
- Color
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Principales brechas de datos
By what name was George Fest: A Night to Celebrate the Music of George Harrison (2016) officially released in Canada in English?
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