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'Thin Lizzy: Live and Dangerous' (Image: Thin Lizzy/Adrian Boot/Retna)
If the glory days of '70s rock 'n' roll had rules, and they did, Thin Lizzy managed to break nearly all of them. They were Irish before anyone had ever dreamed of something called U2. They were racially integrated, fronted by a lean black bassist/singer/born rock star named Phil Lynott. And they were lyrical, in addition to being champion shredders. Not only did they thrive on these rule-breaking terms, but they also came to define a certain perfect model of what would eventually be called "classic rock" but was then just simply rock. As a result of these contradictions, and a host of the damaging personal and behavioral peccadilloes that rock bands are heir to, Thin Lizzy is handed down to rock history as both legendary giants and, curiously, underdogs. This live DVD, a document of the period that yielded the classic "Live and Dangerous LP," was captured in 1977 in London. As the world around them went the way of punk, Lizzy played sweaty, sexy, long-haired, muscular hard rock, with no nod in the direction of Sex Pistols, Clash or any other youngsters who might be out there waiting to see guitar heroes like Lizzy lose a step. Launching right into "The Boys Are Back in Town" and thence into "Massacre," "Still in Love With You," "Are You Ready" and "Baby Drives Me Crazy," they clearly are up on very strong legs. Equally interesting are the band's five "Top of the Pops" appearances, which show them pantomiming their best known hits, including "Whiskey in the Jar" and "Jailbreak." A second live show, from 1983, is a bit lackluster, though it's of some interest just to remember they were even alive by then. They wouldn't be much longer. This is essential Thin Lizzy.
   Smashing Pumpkins/Coming Home Media
Smashing Pumpkins: If All Goes Wrong
If any band ever embodied the contradictions of the rise of "alternative rock" in the '90s, it was Smashing Pumpkins. A group with unabashed stadium ambitions, they rode the wave of alt-culture, acting sullen, jaded and disaffected in song and style until they were big enough to fill those stadiums. Then, when fashions changed, they started complaining about not being massively famous anymore. This new, two-disc DVD, chronicling the band's reunion (well, two original members, anyway) in a series of residencies across the USA, shows that they're still complaining about no longer being massively famous. Band leader Billy Corgan remains petulant and nasal, the songs remain dour and metal-influenced, and the fans (who are many, if not quite legion anymore), remain hopelessly devoted. Also featured, bizarrely: an interview with Pumpkins fan/apologist Pete Townshend. Disc 2 is a recent live show, which, to the reformed band's credit, does not lean on the glory years of early-to-mid-'90s hits, focusing rather on newer stuff like "Death From Above" and five previously unreleased songs. It may not be the best work of their career, but "If All Goes Wrong" proves that, for all their complaining, Smashing Pumpkins are still a working band, which is something.
   Sex Pistols/Rhino
Sex Pistols: There'll Always Be an England
Old age jokes aside, there's nothing wrong with the surviving Sex Pistols, just the wrong side of middle age, mounting the stage to play the old songs in modern day London. They look terrible (I mean, really terrible), but they sound fantastic, far better, unsurprisingly, than they did in 1977. Fashion types mourn the passing of Sid Vicious, but, despite his great look, he was a musical black hole. With the original lineup reinstalled, the Pistols are as ferocious as ever, and, as anyone who has listened to their one LP recently can attest, the music has aged far better than anyone might've imagined. Big deal if they're old? It's the audience, composed mostly of young people dressed and coiffed like punks of 30 years ago, that's dispiriting; could they not dream up their own form of rebellion?  

Speaking of rebellion, Johnny Rotten was possibly the greatest rock front man of all time. And though his real-life alter ego, John Lydon, is no slouch, his performance in this DVD smacks a bit of self-burlesque. But, after a year that has seen Lydon make some very disappointing choices as a public figure, it's nice to be reminded of the powerful anger and comedy that made him so essential so long ago. Too bad he couldn't be coaxed into appearing in the witless bonus feature in which his band mates give a video tour of London. Pretty vacant, indeed.
©20th Century Fox
CSNY Déjà Vu
The relationship of Neil Young to his colleagues/collaborators/nemeses Crosby, Stills and Nash would make a pretty good movie. The shifting sands of loyalty, the ongoing arguments over relative talent and fame, the tantrums, last-minute betrayals and tearful reunions, the discord and, most importantly, the harmony -- all these elements are part of the story every time the world's first true supergroup (referred to by some as CSN & for the love of God, Y) gets its act back together. Unfortunately, this movie, directed by resident wild card Young (under the pseudonym Bernard Shakey), has nothing to do with that imaginary movie. The most intriguing parts of the band's history are just subtext to this reunion tour documentary. The real story is CSNY's objection to the war in Iraq, and the echoes (hence the title) of its objection to the war in Vietnam, which framed its original formation. The "Freedom of Speech" tour allowed the musicians to address this symmetry, while alternately inspiring and alienating its mass audience by being blunt and loud about its antiwar sentiments. To Young's credit, both sides of that reaction are aired in the film, along with a handful of CSNY hits (most appropriately, "Ohio"), backstage moments, and, in a rare show of the band's legendary internal rivalry, a shot of Stephen Stills tumbling off stage. Some things never change.
©Sony
The Mothership Connection: 1976 Live
From the opening announcement ("Houston, the mothership has landed! Let's tear the roof off this mothersucker!") there can be no doubt that the many-headed funk explosion led by master George Clinton (at the peak of his awesome power) is, if you'll pardon the expression, utterly in the house. Parliament-Funkadelic during America's bicentennial year was an essential spectacle, as the global hit "Give Up the Funk (Tear the Roof Off the Sucker)," the indelible "Mothership Connection" LP and the subsequent double live album "Parliament Live: P-Funk Earth Tour" have proved. This DVD raises the stakes to present the full live show, spaceship set, elaborate costumes and all, captured just as Parliament began firing on all cylinders.  

Unafraid of, indeed committed to, ridiculousness in the service of a good party, Clinton and company unabashedly dress up as pyramids and don fuzzy sombreros and diapers while trading epic solos and sexy dance steps. And no one could say it was an ego trip; Clinton isn't even onstage for the first 10 minutes of the show. But once he's there, he has no rival for the role of MC. All the madness whirls around him as the (oh yeah, did I mention, unbelievably skilled) band whips through "Cosmic Slop," "Standing on the Verge of Getting it On," "Dr. Funkenstein," "P-Funk (Wants to Get Funked Up)" and other evergreen staples of the form. I can't even imagine a more authentic document of the heyday of this music, which excuses the DVD's crude cinematography (it was shot more than 30 years ago). Still it sounds great, and there's no mistaking the funk on that stage. Long may it run.
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