Watch The Concert for Bangladesh Movie Online
Dimanche, septembre 5th, 2010![]() |
Watch The Concert for Bangladesh Movie Online.
Movie Title: The Concert for Bangladesh The Concert for Bangladesh is available for streaming or downloading. |
The George Harrison-led “Concert for Bangladesh” will make its DVD debut Oct. 25 via Rhino, the same day Capitol releases a remixed, remastered CD of the project. Rhino is also creating a deluxe edition set with a reproduction of Harrison’s handwritten lyrics for the then-new song “Bangla Desh,” a postcard set, a sticker and a print of the original show poster.
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Staged on Aug. 1, 1971, at New York’s Madison Square Garden, the show raised funds via UNICEF for Bangladeshi refugees caught in the middle of the country’s battle for independence from Pakistan.
It featured Harrison performing alongside Bob Dylan (making a rare public appearance in the wake of a serious motorcycle accident), Eric Clapton, Ringo Starr, Ravi Shankar, Billy Preston, Badfinger and Leon Russell. The event was chronicled the following year on a triple-LP set and a feature film.
Buy,Download, Or Stream The Concert for Bangladesh! Click Here
Rhino’s DVD restores the original 99-minute movie in 5.1 sound and tacks on a wealth of extras, including a rehearsal performance of “If Not for You” with Harrison and Dylan and a soundcheck take on “Come on in My Kitchen” with Harrison, Clapton and Russell, plus Dylan performing “Love Minus Zero/No Limit,” an outtake from the theatrical release.
The DVD will also include a 45-minute documentary, “The Concert for Bangladesh Revisited 2005,” which features interviews with Bob Geldof and United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan.
Here is the track list for “The Concert for Bangladesh”:
“Bangla Dhun”
“Wah-Wah”
“My Sweet Lord”
“Awaiting on You All”
“That’s the Way God Planned It”
“It Don’t Come Easy”
“Beware of Darkness”
Band Introduction
“While My Guitar Gently Weeps”
“Jumpin’ Jack Flash”
“Youngblood”
“Here Comes the Sun”
“A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall”
“It Takes a Lot To Laugh, It Takes a Train To Cry”
“Blowin’ in the Wind”
“Just Like a Woman”
“Something”
“Bangla Desh”
Some year, 1971. The year of the bad rock-star beard. George Harrison had one. Leon Russell had one too, not to mention miles of split ends. Leon! What were you thinking?
It’s all evident in the Concert for Bangladesh movie. But that’s not what I’m here to discuss.
I first saw it when it was released in the theaters in 1972, that’s how old I am. I still have the original vinyl album and the great booklet with all the pictures.
I remember one summer the movie played at the local drive-in and I went with a bunch of buddies, crowded into a lime-green Volkswagen Beetle. When Bob Dylan came on, everyone honked their horns and flashed their lights. It was a cool moment. Of course, one of my cynical friends had to complain. “Look at Dylan! He’s a has-been! He’s OLD!” What was he, like thirty? I guess that was old back then, wasn’t it.
Looking at the film on DVD all these years later, I’m struck by just how much sprituality was in evidence at that show. Harrison was so earnest in his beliefs and it really rang true. It still makes sense to me today. He never sang about subscribing to a certain religion, but simply what you can find inside yourself. You know, The Inner Light and all that.
There was such a heartfelt camaraderie on the stage that night. Ringo Starr looked great behind the skins, alongside future Wilbury Jim Keltner. When those shimmering first chords of It Don’t Come Easy come up, so do my goose-bumps. You have to put this in perspective; The Beatles had only broken up a year or so earlier, and these guys were still infallible gods at the time. Not only that, to see Bob Dylan in person was an event; he’d been in exile for several years at this point. When the spotlight hit Harrison for the first time, he was greeted with an extended standing ovation. It was as though the audience just wanted to thank him for all those years as a Beatle. Well, I guess that’s what they were doing.
Honorable mention goes to Billy Preston, who delivered a stirring rendition of That’s the Way God Planned It, a song that could thaw even the coldest of atheist hearts. The moment he loses control and dances all around the stage is a moment for the ages. Eric Clapton, unfortunately and shamefully, was pretty strung out at the time. It didn’t even look like him, and there was certainly no fire in his playing; he just sort of stumbled about. Thank goodness he managed to yank himself out of that deadly haze before he wound up on the cover of Rolling Stone for the wrong reason.
At the Concert for Bangladesh, George Harrison pulled it off. He came out from behind the shadow of Lennon/McCartney, proving himself as an artist to be reckoned with. He also proved himself to be a great humanitarian.
1971 may have been the year of the bad rock-star beard, but it was a good one for the world.
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