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Image Entertainment | 1977 | 138 min | Not rated | Nov 18, 2008
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Video
Codec: MPEG-4 AVC (30.90 Mbps) Resolution: 1080i
Aspect ratio: 1.78:1 Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Audio
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 English: LPCM 2.0 English: Dolby Digital 5.1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 English: LPCM 2.0 English: Dolby Digital 5.1 ( less)
Subtitles
None
Discs
Blu-ray Disc Single disc (1 BD-50)
Packaging
Inner print
Playback
2K Blu-ray: Region A, B (C untested)
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Price
List price: $29.98
New from: $55.16
Used from: $21.00 (Save 30%)
Buy new on Amazon
Price Buy on:![](https://cdn.statically.io/img/images.static-bluray.com/ebay-logo.png) ![](https://cdn.statically.io/img/images.static-bluray.com/amazon-logo.png) We may earn a commission from purchases made using our links. Thanks for your support! Movie rating
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7.8
| ![IMDb](https://cdn.statically.io/img/images.static-bluray.com/sites/imdb.gif) ![Rotten Tomatoes](https://cdn.statically.io/img/images.static-bluray.com/sites/rottentomatoes.png) |
Blu-ray review
Movie |
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4.0 |
Video |
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3.5 |
Audio |
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4.0 |
Extras |
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3.5 |
Overall |
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4.0
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53% popularity
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The Who at Kilburn: 1977 (1977)
The Who at Kilburn: 1977 Blu-ray offers solid video and great audio in this excellent Blu-ray release
Experience one of the biggest names in rock like you've never seen or heard them
before in this treasure trove of unreleased landmark
performances! Featuring one of the last public appearances by Keith Moon,
the 1977 Kilburn show is a long-sought holy grail for fans who saw only a few
tantalizing glimpses in The Kids Are Alright, and now it can be experienced for the
first time completely mastered in high-definition and mind-blowing surround sound
from the original film elements. Also included is a much earlier never-
before-seen rarity and one of the band's personal favorites, The Who's powerhouse
London Coliseum gig from 1969, as well as a wealth of additional music numbers
which create the ultimate Who home video experience! For more about The Who at Kilburn: 1977 and the The Who at Kilburn: 1977 Blu-ray release, see the The Who at Kilburn: 1977 Blu-ray Review published by Casey Broadwater on February 18, 2010 where this Blu-ray release scored 4.0 out of 5. Starring: Roger Daltrey, Pete Townshend, Keith Moon, John Entwistle, The Who
Producer: Nigel Sinclair
» See full cast & crew
The Who at Kilburn: 1977 Blu-ray Review
A once-lost concert, now found on Blu-ray.
Reviewed by Casey Broadwater, February 18, 2010
"The one thing that disgusts me about The Who," Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder once opined, "is
the way they smashed through every door in the uncharted hallway of rock 'n' roll without leaving
much more than some debris for the rest of us to lay claim to." And it's true. If you look back at the
history of rock as a kind of family tree, The Who diverge from the trunk of rhythm and blues and sit
at the base of a sizeable limb that branches out in a myriad of twiggy genres. The group's early mod
period would eventually inspire 1990s Britpop bands like Oasis and Blur. The stuttered growls of "My
Generation," along with The Who's destructive on-stage attitude�splintering guitars and blowing up
drum kits�bled into the then nascent punk scene pioneered by The Clash, The Ramones, and The
Stooges. Guitarist Pete Townshend even coined the term "power pop" in a 1967 interview to
describe The Who's aggressively melodic sound, which everyone from The Knack to Cheap Trick to
Weezer would borrow and tweak. And, of course, where would the concept of the concept album be
without Tommy, the first so-called rock opera? It's not enough to call The Who influential;
they're nigh inescapable as rock 'n' roll progenitors.
![](https://cdn.statically.io/img/images.static-bluray.com/transparent.gif)
The Pete Townshend shuffle...
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Like most legendary artists, The Who's history is filled with almost mythical moments:
Townshend smashing his first guitar in 1964, an act that would become a staple of the band's
live shows, drummer Keith Moon detonating his drum kit on the Smothers Brothers Comedy
Hour�easily one of rock 'n' roll's top ten most defining spectacles�and the band's raucous
appearances at Woodstock and the Monterey Pop Festival. Another piece of Who-vian lore is the
long-lost concert footage of their show at the Gaumont State Theatre in Kilburn, North London,
on December 15th 1977. Shot with six 35mm cameras and recorded onto 16-track, the concert
was intended to be featured in Jeff Stein's documentary The Kids Are Alright. For
whatever reason�it was rumored the band was unhappy with their performance�the footage
was scrapped, except for a few snippets, and the reels of film sat in The Who's vault for 30-some
years. The closest fans could get to this fabled show�notable for being the band's first live
appearance in over a year and drummer Keith Moon's penultimate concert before his untimely
death by overdose�were low-quality bootlegs of the audio. The Who: Kilburn '77, then,
is like a musical cryptoantiquitist's dream find, a rock 'n' roll Holy Grail on par with discovering a
recording of The Beatles' first practice session. (Well, okay, maybe not that
monumental.) Seen for the first time�in glorious high definition and with a lossless audio track
that's surprisingly robust�the concert finds the band, if not quite at the height of their powers as
rock gods, still towering musical deities capable of putting on an electrifying show.
Admittedly, the band does sound a little rough around the edges for the first two thirds of the set,
and Townshend even forgets how to play parts of "I'm Free" and "Tommy's Holiday Camp." In
fact, after this last song, he turns to the crowd, almost royally pissed off, and says, "Well, this
wasn't f�king even worth filming." The thing is, the angrier he gets, the more passionately he
plays, and the more magnetic of a stage personality he becomes. During "My Wife," he
accidentally bashes himself in the head with his Les Paul and later knocks the top off of one of his
amps�seriously freaking out a backstage guitar tech�but it's all fuel for his internal fire. He's a
restless presence, sliding on his knees across the stage, vaulting erratically into the air with off-
time scissor kicks, and pulling out his signature move�the arcing windmill strum�on nearly
every chorus. With the exception of bassist John Entwistle, who cuts a stoic, almost unmoving
figure throughout, the rest of the band is just as manic and uninhibited, performing on the
outside edge of control. Keith Moon, apocryphal inspiration for The Muppets' wild-eyed
drummer Animal, bounces his sticks off his tom-toms, sending them twirling skyward. So what if
he doesn't catch them; he just picks a new set out of a nearby sheath and goes at it again, laying
down endless drum fills and splashing the cymbals with abandon. He's not as precise here as he
was in the 1960s�and it's more than a little creepy when he jokes about going backstage to
"O.D."�but
he's a bundle of ADHD energy. Likewise, frontman Roger Daltrey leaps and howls like a
werewolf shot by a silver bullet, craning his head toward the ceiling to belt out the higher
notes.
It takes them a few songs to find their groove, but by the time they get to their cover of
"Summertime Blues," the band is locked in and feeling confident enough to embark on some
extended instrumental jams, with Townshend's solos atonally wailing, like a precursor to Sonic
Youth's feedback-driven freakouts. The last six songs of the set are particularly excellent,
especially the closer, "Won't Get Fooled Again," which erupts unexpectedly into a laser show
while Daltrey twirls his microphone on its cord like a lasso and Townshend spins his guitar up into
the air, letting it fall where it may. The Who: Kilburn '77 is undoubtedly important as a
historical rock 'n' roll artifact�with Moon's death imminent, it shows the band at the end of an
era�but it's also a wildly entertaining show by any estimation. While it's probably not the best
place for newcomers to start exploring The Who's body of work, this is an absolute must-have
release for longtime fans of the band, who will feel like they've just unearthed a time
capsule.
Track List:
1. I Can't Explain
2. Substitute
3. Baba O'Riley
4. My Wife
5. Behind Blue Eyes
6. Dreaming From the Waist
7. Pinball Wizard
8. I'm Free
9. Tommy's Holiday Camp
10. Summertime Blues
11. Shakin' All Over
12. My Generation
13. Join Together
14. Who Are You
15. Won't Get Fooled Again
The Who at Kilburn: 1977 Blu-ray, Video Quality
Considering that this 35mm footage has been lying around in a vault for over thirty years, the
concert's 1080i/AVC-encoded transfer looks great, and comes to Blu-ray with a minimum of wear
and tear. Aside from the expected smattering of white specks on the print, there are no stains or
scratches or tears to be found. Grain is ample and thick, and yes, the image is quite soft at times,
but taking its age into account and the fact that the concert was shot under normal stage lights,
The Who: Kilburn '77 holds up remarkably well. While longer shots look somewhat
indistinct at times, close-ups display an appreciable amount of detail for a concert film of this
vintage. Contrast is surprisingly strong thanks to some fairly inky black levels, and all of the colors�
from the multi-hued stage lights to denim blues to the purple of Moon's ridiculously gaudy shirt�are
weighty and natural. Just as importantly, compression-related problems are largely absent, besides
some brief banding and pixilation, mostly occurring in the gradients surrounding the strong lighting.
Given the conditions, I can't imagine the film looking much better.
Do note that as it was nearly impossible to capture screenshots at 1080i, all of the shots in this
review were captured at 720p and do not represent the full visual quality of this disc.
The Who at Kilburn: 1977 Blu-ray, Audio Quality
![](https://cdn.statically.io/img/images.static-bluray.com/transparent.gif)
Who fans will also be surprised by the fidelity of the concert's audio. Stay away, if you can, from the
dull Dolby Digital 5.1 mix, but the DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 and Linear PCM 2.0 tracks are both
excellent. I actually found that while the 5.1 mix has the benefit of featuring crowd sounds in the
rears, along with some bleeding ambience from the music, I prefer the 2.0 mix, which seems
tighter and cleaner, with slightly boosted vocals. That said, either option is a great choice. In both
mixes, there's a nice separation between sounds. Entwistle's bass is panned to the left,
Townshend's guitar takes up the right, Daltrey's vocals sing from the center, and Moon's drumming
is given almost equal weight throughout. There's plenty of low-end heft�hear the overdriven bass
in "My Generation"�and lots of definition in higher sounds, like the synthesizer arpeggios that open
"Baba O'Riley." The standout here is Townshend's guitar tones, which squeal, crunch, and ring out
with vibrancy and power. If I have one complaint�well, two actually�it's that the vocals could
stand to be a hair higher in the mix, and that the mics on Moon's drums aren't all that sensitive.
There are times when he does a drum fill, but the space between the snare hits and the thud of the
floor tom is conspicuously quiet. Still, given the age of the source material, the mix is impressively
dynamic.
The Who at Kilburn: 1977 Blu-ray, Overall Score and Recommendation
If you're a fan of The Who, I can't think of any reason not to own this fantastic release, which
gathers together two of the band's live shows�spaced almost exactly 8 years apart�and presents
them in the highest quality possible considering the source material. The long-lost 1977 Kilburn
concert is the real allure, though, a buried treasure that aficionados have been seeking for years.
Recommended.
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The Who at Kilburn: 1977 Blu-ray, News and Updates
• Lightning Deal: The Who at Kilburn Blu-ray for $12.99 (Sold out) - January 29, 2010
Apart from the Blu-ray player featured in today's Deal of the Day, Amazon has now a BD-related Lightning Deal. For a very limited time, you can order The Who: Kilburn 1977 for only $12.99 (56% off MSRP). The price history for this title shows that it also hit that ...
• The Who Go Blu - July 30, 2008
Image Entertainment has announced that they will bring 'The Who: Killburn 1977' to Blu-ray on November 18th, day-and-date with the DVD release. Video will be presented in 1.78:1 1080p video accompanied by a DTS-HD Master Audio sountrack. Extras include the London ...
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