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Category:    Home > Reviews > Concert > Rock > Fantasy > Counterculture > Led Zeppelin – The Song Remains The Same (Blu-ray + HD-DVD) + Mothership CD/DVD Set

Led Zeppelin – The Song Remains The Same (Blu-ray + HD-DVD) + Mothership CD/DVD Set

 

Film -- Picture: B     Sound: B+     Extras: C+/C     Film: C+

Music CDs –- Picture: B-     Sound: B-     Extras: D     Music: B+

 

 

Note: The Song Remains The Same was originally issued in this new upgraded version in November 2007, but all four versions had to be pulled or stopped when the licensing of a 1976 interview Cameron Crowe did with the band did not have its rights totally cleared for reasons we did not have the full story on when we posted this review.  Issued in both high definition formats, plus two different DVD-Video sets, those older editions are collector’s items that are only going to become more valuable, so get them while you can.  Picture and sound performance is the same in all high definition versions issued.

 

 

Among the many Rock Opera films, Rockumentaries and concert films of the time, Led Zeppelin wanted to do a film of their own and with a difference of some kind.  In an age where there was no home video, no computers, no cable TV and rarely made TV appearances, they wanted to get a film made that would deliver the band at their best and most interesting.  They turned to not one, but two British filmmakers with a good track record, Peter Clifton (whose Popcorn: An Audio-Visual Thing (1969) and The London Rock N Roll Show (1973) showed a deep sense of visuals and Rock history) and Joe Massot (whose 1968 Wonderwall has a surreal sense and became a cult film) to deliver a memorable project.

 

Combining behind the scenes footage, unexpected touring troubles, fantasy sequences and outstanding concert footage, The Song Remains The Same was a hit and has remained very popular for years; a popularity home video has kept alive for decades.  Of course, the sound was never good and transfers usually lame, but Warner and Swan Song (the band’s still-active record label) have fixed up the film for its high definition release and now that the HD format war is over, is the only filmed concert film that will have seen the light in both HD-DVD and Blu-ray.

 

Experimental at times, the film’s biggest problem may have been having two directors instead of just one vision, with the incoherencies often described as intentionally aimed for drug trips, but so many films that were have been forgotten or become laughable.  The opening is a gangster sequence that was already dated by the Coppola Godfather films by half a decade and does not even look like better examples in British gangster films of the time.  Then you have other fantasy sequences, like one during The Rain Song inspired in part by Robert Plant’s love of Lord Of The Rings, but it too is out of place.

 

Of course, the tour troubles are authentic and not stupid reality TV, so those parts work and the concert footage is the best part of the film all around, more than proven by the outtakes in the extras.  However, even that can get sloppy as early in the film, the band arrives at an airport.  It is unidentified, but it is the old (and now closed) Pittsburgh International Airport (you can see the police car with the logo on the door that has the name and looks like Captain America’s shield) escorting the band in the limo.  They even come out of a tunnel and it is the Pittsburgh skyline at the time, then in the very next cut, they are in New York!

 

One explanation is that it is a drug trip, another it that they went to Pittsburgh for drugs because they could not get as good in New York (!?!) and another is the makers thought no one would notice, meaning someone editing was on something.  However, if none of those are true, they should tell us how they did that to save millions gas money.

 

The result of that kind of sloppiness has hurt the film as a whole and though many would like to explain the problems as the lack of closure of counterculture times, it really shows any vision never worked entirely and only the music and seeing the band at their peak has kept the film popular and a favorite.  With home video’s ability to skip boring parts, that only helped it stay that way.  32 years later, we see what an important document it really is of the band as one of the greatest in music history as Rock has fallen on hard times and the record labels are in trouble that no one could have imagined then.

 

Now that they have turned out to be so influential, more than in music, you can see clearly what the big deal was about saved on film and not just low-definition video for posterity.  No, The Song Remains The Same is not one of the greatest Rock films, but it is one of the greatest Rock bands of all time in peak form and that is reason enough for it to remain popular for many decades to come.

 

 

 

Released at the time to go with the film’s release, Warner Music issued a two CD/one DVD set called Mothership which is really nothing more than abbreviated versions of better past Zeppelin box sets.  The CD tracks come from the old CD box that boasted Page’s personal supervision in mastering, but the PCM 2.0 16/44.1 Stereo sound throughout sounds shrill, limited and is disappointing throughout.  The master tapes need revisited.  The DVD is from the untitled DVD set called DVD and the quality is the same as that decent set, especially with its DTS 5.1 mixes (like the DVD versions of Song we did not receive to review) leading one to ask, why issue such a set when diehard fans will buy the full sets?  Heck, Zeppelin albums are being reissued in audiophile vinyl yet again, so this is a stop gap crash course set at best and only for those curious to see and not wanting to spend the money on the larger sets.  They’d be better off starting with this film instead.

 

 

 

The 1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image may be the best the film has ever looked in either format, but the print source has inconsistent fleshtones throughout and though color and many shots can be impressive, there is more grain than expected for a film from 1976.  It is obvious that more work needs to be done to restore and clean the original camera negative materials.  Director of Photography Ernest Day is one of the unsung heroes of this production, making it look better than it might have in lesser hands.  This is one of the highest profile films the legendary camera operator/second unit director ever shot personally, along with David Lean’s A Passage To India (next up on Blu-ray) and the underrated, funny Revenge Of The Pink Panther.  The band ought to hire Robert Harris to do further restoration at whatever expense is needed.

 

The sound on this film in the past has been notoriously bad, offering one of the worst old analog Dolby-A type/Dolby Stereo/Dolby System mixes ever made.  Dolby has just arrived in theaters and was a distorted disaster on the first music films it was used on, including the Barbra Streisand A Star Is Born and atrocious, notorious, shrill stereo “upgrade” to The Beatles’ A Hard Day’s Night, both also 1976.  The film was also issued in 4-track 35mm magnetic stereo prints in 1976 and after that batch, apparently never again.  Fortunately, the original sound masters have finally been retrieved and a new Dolby TrueHD 5.1 mix (offered in both high definition formats) has been created that finally fixes just about all the numerous problems the previous film and video versions were plagued with.  It will be a revelation to fans of the band and film, with a warmth and clarity we thought we’d never hear.  The standard Dolby Digital 5.1 is no match and 2.0 even less so, though TrueHD is sadly not available for the bonus songs, in the extras, not in the film, from the same Madison Square Garden performances.

 

In the extras, those songs include Celebration Day [Cutting Copy], Over The Hills & Far Away (both never before released, Misty Mountain Top and The Ocean.  You also get the original theatrical trailer, vintage TV footage of the band getting robbed during their 1973 New York City concert, 1973 Tampa News report of a concert they played that broke a Beatles record and an archival BBC interview with Plant.  Of course if you are lucky, you’ll land that 1976 Crowe interview on the copy you might find if you look hard enough, but that is still a nice set of goods.  At least the film’s sound is finally top rate.

 

For more on the band, try this link on a documentary examining the band entitled The Origins Of The Species:

 

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/4261/Led+Zeppelin+-+The+Origins+Of

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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