Search - Moogfest 2006: Live on DVD


Moogfest 2006: Live
Moogfest 2006 Live
Genres: Music Video & Concerts
NR     2007     1hr 10min

Featuring an incredible array of the world's leading keyboardists, Moogfest, the annual festival celebrating the groundbreaking achievements of maverick inventor Robert Moog and his namesake synthesizer, captures the spiri...  more »

     
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Movie Details

Genres: Music Video & Concerts
Sub-Genres: Pop, Rock & Roll
Studio: Mvd Visual
Format: DVD - Color
DVD Release Date: 07/17/2007
Original Release Date: 01/01/2006
Theatrical Release Date: 01/01/2006
Release Year: 2007
Run Time: 1hr 10min
Screens: Color
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Languages: English

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Movie Reviews

Stick with the prequel
David M. Madden | salt lake, utah United States | 09/04/2007
(2 out of 5 stars)

"Moogfest 2006 Live serves as a sequel of sorts to the 2004 feature, Moog - sort of a "now watch these instruments in action" presentation. However, whereas the former release focuses on artists who have or currently use various Moog synthesizers to push music forward (Meat beat Manifesto, Charlie Clouser, Luke Vibert), this feature stars only the veterans (ex-The Cure's Roger O'Donnell being the anomaly here). Alternating between interviews and performances, the film makers first question folks such as Bernie Worrell, Keith Emerson and Jan Hammer about how the late Bob Moog's contributions changed their lives then back up these arguments with performances from Moogfest in New York's B.B. King Blues Club. Unfortunately, the aforementioned artists' mystique and the interest in the art of jamming-on-a-synth-as-if-it-were-a-guitar faded years ago. We're left with crusty old men making faces - the type one makes when he's really into what he's playing - and bending mod wheels alongside an even more dated version of funk-fusion. Turntablist DJ Logic, performing nowhere near a Moog, provides an interesting angle to Worrell's set, but he's inevitably overshadowed by Bernie's solo lines (played, oddly enough, on a Kurzweil, not a Moog!); Emerson reworks a version of his hits as potential energy drips off an untouched immense modular synth behind him. Hammer's enthusiasm oozes and hair flies with each squelch and arpeggiation, but it isn't enough to save this movie. With lackluster performances and nothing more than superficial anecdotes (and no extras), this DVD is a highly disappointing and rather insulting so-called homage to a great man."