Description
At the end of 1999, Paul McCartney returned to the Cavern Club for the first time in 35 years. The Japanese broadcast version of the special show, which is also the official work “LIVE AT CAVERN”, has been decided to be released. This work contains the same official footage as the “Cavern Club performance on December 14, 1999”. It is a special live performance held at the club where the Beatles originated, with 300 limited fans. Of course, it is not a copy of the official DVD, but the version that was broadcast in Japan at that time. Our shop makes DVDs of records of core recording enthusiasts in Japan, and this work is one of them. As with the masterpieces up to now, the best masters of the time have been meticulously digitized. Only for Japanese broadcasts, there are captions that explain (in a maniac way) Paul’s MC and the origins of the songs, but the beauty of the font is a visual beauty that stands out in detail even to the eyes of today’s digital era. However, it is still an air check from 18 years ago. As this is a live performance that has already been officially and officially made into the ultimate DVD, this work does not reach the quality. So why did I introduce it in this way? It is, without a doubt, the “scent of 1999” when the end of the century approaches. Before the main live performance, a special program-like corner was added in which Paul talks about the origins of the “Cavern Club,” highlighting the specialness of the show that is about to begin. The composition and style of the story bring to mind the image of “Japan in 1999,” where rock broadcasting and understanding of the Beatles have progressed. Even more powerful than that are the commercials that are sandwiched in between. You might think that “1999 is quite recent,” but 18 years is surprisingly long. Mobile phone commercials proudly tout “256-color color images,” “up to 3,000-character emails,” “3-voice melodies,” and “video playback,” and small screens that have long since become extinct are touted as if they were giant monitors. The image character of the commercial is a big-name actress who remarried a Kabuki actor last year, and she is still exuding pheromones even though she hasn’t even been married for the first time to a comedian. In addition, there are commercials for a certain music company that dominated the music industry in the 90s, with Gunkuro dancing Para Para, a Get Wild keyboard player smiling unaware of the misfortune that is creeping up on him, and a female monkey-faced singer from Okinawa who has just evolved into a human… I would like to give up just from this, but this work is still merciless. A mysterious idol group called “Z-1” features a big-name actress who is currently in the spotlight, the Dreamcast is still active, there is not a single familiar face in the figure skating commercial, “cdmaOne 2” has been released, and Schwarzenegger was before he became a politician… Amidst all this onslaught, Super Hitoshi-kun has not changed at all. My memory is so fresh that my brain is already a mess. It is precisely because the weight of time is interspersed at key points that the youthfulness of Paul, who was 57 at the time, and Dave Gilmour, who was 53 at the time, stands out. It has been about a year and a half since Linda passed away. Live at the Cavern was filled with Paul’s determination to stand up again. If you just want to look back on Paul’s life, the official DVD is enough. However, we were also living at that time and moment. We feel the era from our side, and face ourselves as we gazed upon Paul in that atmosphere. This is what this work is all about. This nostalgia can only be experienced on a Japanese broadcast, because it is a Japanese broadcast. We want you to reunite with Paul’s heroic figure along with the stage of your own life that you walked 18 years ago. A masterpiece gift filled with such thoughts. Live at Cavern Club, Liverpool, UK 14th December 1999 1. Opening/Biography 2. Introduction 3. CM 4. Honey Hush 5. Blue Jean Bop 6. Brown Eyed Handsome Man 7. CM 8. Fabulous 9. What It Is 10. Lonesome Town 11. Twenty Flight Rock 12. CM 13. No Other Baby 14. Try Not To Cry 15. Shake A Hand 16. All Shook Up 17. CM 18. I Saw Her Standing There 19. Party 20. End Credit 21. CM Paul McCartney – Vocal, Guitar David Gilmour – Guitar Ian Paice – Drums Mick Green – Guitar Pete Wingfield – Keyboards Chris Hall – Accordion PRO-SHOT COLOR NTSC Approx.56min.
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