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Blind Melon - Letters From a Porcupine |
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DVD Music-Concert
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Written by Bryan Dailey
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Tuesday, 11 September 2001 |
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title:
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Blind Melon: Letters From A Porcupine |
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studio:
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Capitol Records DVD |
| MPAA rating: |
NR |
| starring: |
Shannon Hoon, Christopher Thorn, Brad Smith, Glenn Graham, Terry Stevens, Andy Wallace |
| release year: |
2001 |
| film rating: |
Four Stars |
| sound/picture: |
Four Stars |
| reviewed by: |
Bryan Dailey |
The day Chris Farley, wearing a bumblebee girl outfit, introduced Blind
Melon on "Saturday Night Live," it was official. Blind Melon had made
the big time. In a few short months, this band of North Carolina
alterna-rockers was thrust into the spotlight, thanks to their single
"No Rain" being in constant rotation on the radio and MTV. It was too
much fame, too fast for lead singer Shannon Hoon, who after repeated
trouble with the law, and battles with drug addiction, died of an
accidental cocaine overdose on October 21,1995. As a tribute to Hoon,
the remaining members of Blind Melon and Capitol Records released
"Letters from a Porcupine" in 1996 on VHS and received a Grammy
nomination for Best Long Form Video. The new special edition DVD
release of "Letters From a Porcupine" has been spiffed up with
additional footage and bonus features, including all eight of Blind
Melon’s video clips, interviews with the band members talking about
their multi-platinum debut album, the follow-up Soup, and Nico, the
Enhanced CD released after Hoon's death. The disc also has the ability
to play several audio tracks from each of Blind Melon’s studio albums.
Because the band was tagged with the "one-hit-wonder" label after
success of ‘No Rain," the incredible musical talent of Blind Melon has
been overlooked. The bulk of this DVD is the 82-minute documentary,
including a video montage dedicated to Shannon Hoon. It is filled with
clips of the band in various live performances, home videos of the band
at parties, in the studio, and other day-to-day events filmed with a
regular video camera by friends and family. It’s reminiscent of the VH1
Behind the Music series and celebrates the good parts of Hoon’s life,
rather than dwelling on the negatives.
Another documentary on the DVD focuses on the making of the incredible
sophomore album Soup, produced by Andy Wallace (Faith No More, Slayer,
Sepeltura). Blind Melon went to New Orleans to a funky old mansion that
was converted into a recording studio to get a cool "vibe" for Soup.
"Letters from a Porcupine" gives the viewer some insight into the
recording process, but not from an overly technical standpoint.
The sound quality of the 19 live performances on "Letters From a
Porcupine" spans the entire spectrum. The band’s live performance at
Woodstock is spotty, and some of the live club performances aren’t
mixed as well as they could have been, but the band’s level of talent
never ceases to shine through, even in the worst-sounding venues. Some
of the better sounding clips include Blind Melon’s performance of
"Change" on The Late Show with David Letterman, "No Rain" on Saturday
Night Live and their appearance on Canada's MuchMusic, where they
played the songs "Lemonade" and "St. Andrew's Fall." The video quality
is all over the place, but this to be expected on an documentary that
pulls from so many different sources.
Where this DVD stumbles is in the menus and navigation of the actual
disc. The menus are a tad corny and the Blind Melon musical riffs that
play in the background are overly repetitive. The main documentary is
not broken into separate chapters, so if you want to see one of the
performances in the middle of the main documentary, you’ll have to
fast-forward to it. You can choose the individual music videos you want
to watch, but to have the documentary as one long track is a major flaw.
If you aren’t familiar with Blind Melon but like alternative music with
a slight "hippie" twist to it, this is the band for you. The dueling
guitar work of Terry Stevens and Christopher, the backing vocals and
melodic bass work of Brad Smith and Hoon’s distinct raspy vocals are
all here. Blind Melon fans that do not have this DVD have a huge void
in their collection. It’s a fitting tribute to a band was struck down
in the middle of their most creative years. Even though they had faded
from the spotlight, it’s painfully apparent to anyone who watches this
touching documentary that the best years for Blind Melon had yet to
come.
| more details |
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sound format:
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Dolby Digital 5.1 |
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aspect ratio(s):
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1.85:1 |
| special features: |
Video History including 8 Blind Melon video clips |
| comments: |
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