David Bowie - Serious Moonlight [DVD] [2006]
Price: £9.99 (A saving of £4 on the £13.99 RRP!)
Condition: New
Format: DVD
Label: EMI
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Original Release Date: 21-03-2006
Additonal Features: Live, PAL
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By Nickname,
The real revelation however, is the 'Ricochet' documentary offered as a special feature. It gives interesting insight into Bowie and his 'Far East'. It's classic Bowie with both the artfulness and playfulness (and occasional seriousness) so inherent in his work. All in all, 'Serious Moonlight' satisfies - a whole lot of Bowie, a little bit of history and a good time had by all. Highly recommended.
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By Steve, By DUNDEE Scotland
The set-list is a fairly judicious balance- its more or less a greatest hits package with some Let's Dance songs thrown in, although the emphasis is more on the late seventies stuff, albeit with the experimental dissonance jettisoned in favour of a commercial 80s sound, which was clearly aimed at garnering acceptance from the kind of people who were buying Phil Collins records at the time(!) It's true that Bowie was "thinking about his pension" at this point (and why not? He spent the seventies being financially shafted by RCA), but remarkably, this doesn't detract from the concert at all. With such a solid backing band (Slick, Alomar, the drummer from Chic) how could you possibly mess up songs like Heroes, Golden Years, Ashes to Ashes and Young Americans? No amount of tinkering with the arrangements alters these indubitable classics.
Further, I think its a mistake to criticise Bowie for ditching the artiness of his late 70s phase in favour of a more commercial approach here. The fact is, that Bowie's music has always been quite theatrical and camp, so the hammy theatrics on show here not only don't detract from the songs, they sometimes enhance them. Cracked Actor, for instance, sees Bowie dressed in Shakespearian garb with Yorick's skull, while the arrangement ditches the original's fuzzy, amped-up guitar lead for cheesy synth-stabs, accompanied by a slinky bass groove. Its a camped-up treat, one of the show's highlights. My other fave is the cover of White Light/White Heat, which makes something of a mockery of the original, turning its pretentious artiness into a campy treat, topped off by the bandana-ed Earl Slick's preposterous 3-minute guitar solo, a brazen display of 80s excess. Ive always thought the Velvet's original was over-rated anyway, and seeing it revamped in this way gave me a great deal of perverse pleasure.
But its not all camped-up, hammy pseudery. (Nor are the pleasures on offer purely those of a perverse nature...) There's a solid performance underneath the cheesiness, and, I said above, don't be fooled into thinking that this concert ought to be forgotten along with Bowie's underwhelming studio output from the same period.
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By obdewlla-x,
So here we have a hits-heavy setlist in which almost all the songs are subjected to arrangements that suck all the menace, all the subversive experimentation out of them. Lots of loungey saxophone charts, lots of primitive-sounding synthesizer. Without its attendant guitar feedback and harmonica, "Cracked Actor"'s innuendo could easily pass by the listener. "Rebel Rebel" and "Fashion" are abbreviated in order to fit into medleys. "What In The World", "Look Back In Anger" and "Scary Monsters" are conspicuously lacking in dissonance and vocal/guitar extremities. When Bowie (and Earl Slick) tackle Lou Reed's "White Light White Heat" they proceed from the `Rock 'n Roll Animal' arrangement (not a good idea). "Station to Station" survives the sanitisation process - and then only to find itself cut short by the film editor! Elsewhere, play-it-safe renditions of Life On Mars, Sorrow, China Girl etc.
With all this, a stage set that looks like it was designed for Kid Creole and the rather silly choreography of the Simms Brothers - it's unlikely to be a satisfactory viewing/listening experience for hardcore Bowie-ologists. Anyone who prefers Outside to Hours, Lodger to Young Americans, can afford to leave this alone.
And now that I've told you what this DVD is - let me tell you what it isn't: a comprehensive document of the live video adventures of Mr Bowie circa 1983.
Restoring the Ricochet documentary to the catalogue, and extending it, is laudable - but in their failure to restore the interviews that were appended to the original two-volume VHS release of the concert (as if determined to make life difficult for Bowie-ologists hoping to streamline their collections) EMI has once again shown its inability to understand its obligations to the music consuming public. Somebody should tell them, "it's not your job to rewrite history, but to preserve it, right?!!"
Rating: 




By Wowser, Northern England
The concert itself is not for everyone, by all means, but even beyond the blonde perm and hammy theatrics, there lurks a solid concert. Its strength lies mainly in the track listing: it's basically the Low through Scary Monsters period with some older material and new songs thrown in. With Carlos Alomar (who features a lot in the concert) and Chic's Tony Thompson, the material has a nice funky edge, something missing in Bowie's current line-up.
The low points are Life on Mars and Space Oddity, which don't work at all well in these settings, the latter seeming to grind to a halt in places. Also, Earl Slick and his red hair band should have been tamed: each time he comes on for a solo it feels like you're watching a Van Halen covers band - it's not ideal. (When Bowie introduces the band towards the end, Slick is greeted by rapturous applause while Alomar just gets a routine clapping, which is simply unfair.).
Also included here is the documentary, Ricochet. Thankfully, Bowie doesn't act in the film. Instead, we see him hob-knobbing with the people of Singapore, Bangkok and Hong Kong. There are actually some nice shots of these cities, with a particularly nice montage of Bangkok set to the music of Moss Garden. There is also footage of the Hong Kong leg of the tour, where the set is more intimate and a little rougher round the edges.
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By martin32242, Spain
This DVD gives you an great range of songs preformed live.
The Picture quality is limited and the sound is upgraded to 5.1 Surround Sound and better than the original VHS video.
The "Ricochet" Documentary is very good as well, and is a lot longer than the original VHS video.
If you are a Bowie fan it is a must have.
For me one of the best concerts on DVD.

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