Cheap The Dick Cavett Show - Rock Icons (DVD) (Fred Foy) Price
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$31.99
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| ACTORS: | Fred Foy |
| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 26 May, 1969 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Shout Factory |
| MPAA RATING: | NR (Not Rated) |
| FEATURES: | Box set, Color, Compilation, NTSC |
| TYPE: | Album Rock, Movie, Pop, Pop/Rock, Rock, Singer/Songwriter, TV Shows, Television |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| # OF MEDIA: | 3 |
| UPC: | 826663303094 |
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Customer Reviews of The Dick Cavett Show - Rock Icons
Great content...but I was so much looking forward to this 3 DVD set and the content itself was really great. However the DVD menus were, in my opinion, probably one of the worst. I would have given it 5 stars but for the useless and hard to navigate menus. <
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A lost gem
This is a great video collection if you have any interest in rock & cultural history. I was born in '72, and find this stuff an interesting statement on the cultural norms & upheavals of the late 60s & early 70s. I haven't made it through all the episodes yet, but Janis Joplin is electric in her performances.
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>The Sly Stone interview is funny and sad at the same time. Fresh performance.
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>The Bowie interview intriguing. Check out the late Luther Vandross singing backup in his leisure suit.
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>Finally, the Jefferson Airplane, CSN and Joni Mitchell episode is fresh off the heels of Woodstock - something I didn't know until I watched.
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>If you like music and rock history, get it.
Inept host, feeble guests
I thought I might be able to recapture some of the original pleasure of watching the Cavett shows, but I was terribly wrong. In contrast to the wit he seemed when I was a kid, he now seems like a witless dolt. His jokes are not funny, his questions not perceptive, and he constantly steps all over his guests' attempts to utter pointless gibberish. The DVD notes make a fool out of Sly Stone, and I expected the worst, but compared to the rest of the numbskulls, and to Cavett himself, Sly comes off rather sensibly. It's hardly necessary to ridicule Sly for drug use when Cavett has raved about the wonderful effects of his own electroshock treatments. Interviews of semi-literate musicians by a shallow, self-obsessed host do not make for pleasurable viewing.