Cheap Half Pint - Live in Jamaica (DVD) Price
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| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 20 May, 2003 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Mvd Visual |
| MPAA RATING: | NR (Not Rated) |
| FEATURES: | Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Live, NTSC |
| TYPE: | Concerts, Music, Music Video, Music Video - Soul, Performance, Pop, Reggae, Reggae Music, Vocal Music |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| MPN: | DRG-217 |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 022891021797 |
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Customer Reviews of Half Pint - Live in Jamaica
Half Pint Live--Half of What I Expected Immediately things seemed wrong with this DVD. The jacket announced that this concert was filmed in "Summer 2002." At the start of the concert video, on screen the date is announced as May 26, 2001. Which concert was I supposed to get? This aside, the audio and video quality instantly stood out as laughable. The concert is shot on what looks like three cameras, and seems amateurish with many poor angle and light choices. Many shots are of the crowd. During several songs, the video quality takes on the appearance of a VCR tape image that has been recorded over and over, complete with strobe flashing red and blue ghosts. Horrible quality! As for the audio, very tinny and lots of mid range with absolutely no bottom end. Awful! It sounds like a very poor audience recording. <
>As for the concert itself, it is great. Half Pint's voice is a little raspier than it used to be, but he still has an exciting delivery. He sings all his 80's hits and has the crowd movin'. He is sweating buckets at the end of the show. <
>Great concert performance, terrible audio and video quality. <
>The bonus features include a 30-plus minute interview with Half Pint that I would assume is from a Jamaican television show. It includes video clips of two other Half Pint live performances (with awful audio and video as well). The interview is interesting and may be this DVD's only redeeming quality.
Bad Quality
I enjoyed listening to the songs since I have most of the music from this artist. The negative like with plenty of these dvd concerts, are poor sound and picture quality. I received the dvd in a little envelope and there is no 5.1 at all. I would be happy with just plain 'ol stereo. This is not the first dvd that I buy with poor quality. I notice the Morgan Heritage and Beres DVD's are of excellent quality but some of the other artist get very bad recordings released and its not fair to nobody. A pure rip off business. Nuff Respect! MP.
A rare glimpse at one of Jamaica's best-loved singers
I'd lay good odds, there's not a reggae music lover alive who hasn't enjoyed, owned and worn out at least a dozen of Half Pint's hit tunes. The dynamic Jamaican singer, born Lindon Roberts has scored with reggae audiences for two decades now, with hits including: "Sally", "Winsome", "Level The Vibes" and the tune that many call Jamaica's National Anthem - "Greetings." Crowned the new `Prince of Reggae' by Jamaica's press, a title shared by very few other exceptional artists including Peter Tosh and Dennis Brown, Half Pint has emerged through dancehall fever and the conscious roots scene as one of reggae music's most dignified, humble and best-loved artists.
Having been covered by rock and roll's greatest band, The Rolling Stones in 1987 ("Too Rude" was officially recognized as a cover of "Winsome") audiences worldwide now have the opportunity to watch Half Pint perform his greatest hits live, during this hour-long, May 2001 Heineken Startime concert in Kingston Jamaica. Looking healthy and sounding as crisp as a biscuit, Half Pint entertains thousands of smiling faces bedecked in a fine crown of dreads and white linen threads. Backed by the ever resourceful, everlasting Lloyd Parks & We The People Band, Pint covers the stage beyond the stature of his stage name and segues in and out of fifteen numbers majestically. From the opening "Greetings", "Winsome" and "Crazy Girl" numbers, Pint warms the crowd with "Cost of Living" and "Political Fiction" before turning the heat up a notch with "Level The Vibes." From then on it's "Victory," the girl favorite, "Substitute Lover" and a host of old favorites including, "Love Zone", "Puchie Lou" and "Sally."
Bonus vibes include two music videos, "Just Be Good To Me" and "Together We All," a television `On Stage' interview with Winford Williams, a bio, discography and photographic slide show. The first music video has some good shots of Pint happily cruising in a convertible red Mercedes but is somewhat clouded by the amateurish love interludes woven into the plot. "Together we All" is much more real in comparison and visually stimulating.Bonus vibes include two music videos, "Just Be Good To Me" and "Together We All," a television `On Stage' interview with Winford Williams, a bio, discography and photographic slide show. The first music video has some good shots of Pint happily cruising in a red, convertible Mercedes, but is somewhat clouded by the accompanying amateur acting. "Together we All" is much more real in comparison and visually stimulating.
Overall, the sound quality is excellent (5.1 surround sound) and apart from some annoying disruptive edits in between song segments, the filming is good. Mid-way through the concert there are some good close-ups on stage, making up for some color saturation problems due to low light and the nature of the outdoor/evening location in Kingston. Still, with these small diversions aside, this DVD is a must-have for Half Pint and reggae lovers alike, as it offers a rare glimpse of a singer who represents all that is uplifting and righteous in today's reggae business.