Name Discs
All You Need Is Love - Series 1 - Complete - Disc 1
Ex Disc 1
All You Need Is Love - Series 1 - Complete - Disc 2
Ex Disc 2
All You Need Is Love - Series 1 - Complete - Disc 3
Ex Disc 3
All You Need Is Love - Series 1 - Complete - Disc 4
Ex Disc 4
All You Need Is Love - Series 1 - Complete - Disc 5
Ex Disc 5

DVD Information

Run time: 14 hours 45 minutes
Rental release: 05 May 2008
Main languages: English
Write your own review

Most helpful review All You Need Is Love - Series 1 - Complete

  • It's All Too Much

    Rated - 3.0 stars  
    By JamieBton (2 reviews) from Brighton , 26 Sep 2008

    [Highly rated reviewer]

    Music documentaries nowadays are slick - lots of talking heads, rare footage - the history, at least of rock'n'roll, and of other notable genres, country, blues, jazz, have been told, from various angles, ad infinitum. There are accepted wisdoms about music that are rarely questioned. When Tony Palmer's 17-part series was first broadcast in 1977, things were not so slick. And his history of popular music attempts to cover, with an unashamedly American, and to a lesser extent British, bias, pretty much the 20th century up to that point. Its value is in the number of interviews with musicians and songwriters no longer around to tell their stories (Hoagy Carmichael is particularly entertaining), and his quirky take on popular music has a certain charm. It was a massive and ambitious undertaking at the time, and that must be acknowledged. But its flaws are many - too many to mention, but here are a few... The first six or seven episodes, chronologically, take every opportunity to show white performers in blackface make-up, and illustrate the way watered-down versions of black music were made acceptable to a wider audience - but from then on, James Brown is overlooked, as are many Motown acts, and many of the major blues and jazz names (Howling Wolf, Charles Mingus) are missed out in favour of forgotten or obscure artists. In fact, black music gets a pretty raw deal generally, as an episode on rhythm and blues spends 15 minutes talking about white gospel and about Pat Boone, a man who gets far, far too much air time. In rock'n'roll, Jerry Lee Lewis is hardly offscreen, while Little Richard and Chuck Berry are very poorly served. In a 'protest' episode, British folk singer Leon Rosselson gets to perform a whole song, while Bob Dylan is barely mentioned in passing. And it goes on, right up to the final episode, where Black Oak Arkansas and Tangerine Dream represent 'new directions', while the late great music critic Lester Bangs is a lone voice of sanity, his every utterance predicting the puink movement that would blow away, temporarily, the tired and flabby '70s rock that clogs up most of the last couple of epsiodes. A historical document, in more ways than one.
    • Was this review helpful to you?
    • (7) Yes |
    •  No (0)

All reviews

(3)
  • Disc One just the introduction

    Rated - 2.0 stars  
    By a customer from London , 27 Apr 2011
    disc one is only around 50 mins long

    and is an introduction. Best to skip to set of episodes that interest you.I don't think this has dated well.
    • Was this review helpful to you?
    • (1) Yes |
    •  No (0)
  • It's All Too Much

    Rated - 3.0 stars  
    By JamieBton (2 reviews) from Brighton , 26 Sep 2008
    Music documentaries nowadays are slick - lots of talking heads, rare footage - the history, at least of rock'n'roll, and of other notable genres, country, blues, jazz, have been told, from various angles, ad infinitum. There are accepted wisdoms about music that are rarely questioned. When Tony Palmer's 17-part series was first broadcast in 1977, things were not so slick. And his history of popular music attempts to cover, with an unashamedly American, and to a lesser extent British, bias, pretty much the 20th century up to that point. Its value is in the number of interviews with musicians and songwriters no longer around to tell their stories (Hoagy Carmichael is particularly entertaining), and his quirky take on popular music has a certain charm. It was a massive and ambitious undertaking at the time, and that must be acknowledged. But its flaws are many - too many to mention, but here are a few... The first six or seven episodes, chronologically, take every opportunity to show white performers in blackface make-up, and illustrate the way watered-down versions of black music were made acceptable to a wider audience - but from then on, James Brown is overlooked, as are many Motown acts, and many of the major blues and jazz names (Howling Wolf, Charles Mingus) are missed out in favour of forgotten or obscure artists. In fact, black music gets a pretty raw deal generally, as an episode on rhythm and blues spends 15 minutes talking about white gospel and about Pat Boone, a man who gets far, far too much air time. In rock'n'roll, Jerry Lee Lewis is hardly offscreen, while Little Richard and Chuck Berry are very poorly served. In a 'protest' episode, British folk singer Leon Rosselson gets to perform a whole song, while Bob Dylan is barely mentioned in passing. And it goes on, right up to the final episode, where Black Oak Arkansas and Tangerine Dream represent 'new directions', while the late great music critic Lester Bangs is a lone voice of sanity, his every utterance predicting the puink movement that would blow away, temporarily, the tired and flabby '70s rock that clogs up most of the last couple of epsiodes. A historical document, in more ways than one.
    • Was this review helpful to you?
    • (7) Yes |
    •  No (0)
  • All You Need Is Love Collection

    Rated - 5.0 stars  
    By leelewis (2 reviews) from Chesterfield , 27 Jun 2008
    A brilliant collection of music and commentary which is highly recommended. Disc 4 was particularly memorable with the live footage of Jerry Lee Lewis the best concert footage ever.
    • Was this review helpful to you?
    • (1) Yes |
    •  No (0)
 

Agree or disagree? Write your own review

Please sign in to LOVEFiLM to write your review

Sign in to LOVEFiLM

Not a member yet?

Sign up to start your 30-day FREE trial