Rainbow was formed by Ritchie Blackmore in 1975 after he left Deep Purple at the height of their fame. They were instantly successful and released a string of hit albums, with an ever changing line-up between 1975 and 1983... more », when Blackmore broke up the group to join the re-formed Deep Purple. This concert from their European tour in 1977 features the line-up responsible for the "Long Live Rock ?n? Roll" album released later that year, including vocalist Ronnie James Dio and drummer Cozy Powell. Blackmore had to be smuggled out of Austria after trouble with the police at a gig two nights earlier and was very late arriving in Munich, all of which seemed to inspire both the band and the audience to create a truly remarkable gig.« less
Rainbow was formed by Ritchie Blackmore in 1975 after he left Deep Purple at the height of their fame. They were instantly successful and released a string of hit albums, with an ever changing line-up between 1975 and 1983, when Blackmore broke up the group to join the re-formed Deep Purple. This concert from their European tour in 1977 features the line-up responsible for the "Long Live Rock ?n? Roll" album released later that year, including vocalist Ronnie James Dio and drummer Cozy Powell. Blackmore had to be smuggled out of Austria after trouble with the police at a gig two nights earlier and was very late arriving in Munich, all of which seemed to inspire both the band and the audience to create a truly remarkable gig.
CD Reviews
I See A Rainbow Rising
Sky | New York | 09/19/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Man, I remember seeing Rainbow circa 1977 at the Capitol Theatre in Passaic, NJ. I refer fondly to that period of time in my life as "My Dark Years", but due to certain circumstances my memories of that time are...well..a bit dark. So what a delight it was to see the release of Rainbow Live in Munich to be able to experience the show on DVD with a clear head. The problem is that the awesome performances on this disk are footage from 1977, so the video quality is 1977 video...and that ain't too good.
Often times there are real reminders that the video is dated because of horizontal lines across the picture and just plain old low quality video. The experience is reduced to a mere DVD viewing after enjoying what was more of a front row seat experience with the quality HD video on some recent releases {i.e. Judas Priest (Rising in the East), Iron Maiden (Rock in Rio), Dio (Holy Diver Live) and even Rock the Nation by Kiss}.
The audio on Live in Munich is a completely different story. The audio wizards took the soundtrack to the show on this disk, cleaned it up and they've offered it with a terrific 5.1 Dolby or DTS mix. I thought the DTS repro sounded the best on my system.
Regardless of the horrible video, it was great to reminisce and watch as singer Ronnie James Dio, legend Ritchie Blackmore, inspirational Heavy Metal drummer Cozy Powell, Bob Daisley (Bass) and David Stone (Keys) went through some of the classics from Rainbow's first three releases.
What's really sad is that Rainbow could have done this concert with a lot more than 8 songs. Ritchie Blackmore's infatuation with himself prevented that. In almost every song except the first, Blackmore self-indulges in out-of-place guitar solos that are difficult to sit through. I'm not talking about the bridge guitar solos that are on the studio releases; I'm talking about random intros or interruptions in each song to deliver a monotonous, rambling, wee-da-la-wee-da-la of the six-string. Instead of the guitar monotony, great tunes that fans really wanted to hear (like Tarot Woman, Stargazer, etc) could have been included. Just look at the guitar-solo-excessive times on these songs....They give you:
1) Kill the King 4:42
2) Mistreated 11:49
3) Sixteenth Century Greensleeves 8:52
4) Catch the Rainbow 18:14
5) Long Live Rock and Roll 8:04
6) Man on the Silver Mountain 16:25
7) Still I'm Sad 27:33
8) Do You Close Your Eyes 15:40
Plus a Bonus disk with videos of LLRR, Gates of Babylon and LA Connection.
But all in all, if you were a Dio-years Rainbow fan don't pass on this. Just be sure that your expectations are set for a view into the past with the past's video quality. The performances are 4 stars, the reproduced sound is 4 stars and the video quality is 1 star.
"
Classic rock classic concert
bob turnley | birmingham,al,usa | 09/04/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)
"For the most part this is a concert that rivals anything else now available from the 70's. Great vocals and great playing are heard throughout. It is a short set list however and all songs are stretched out with solos. This works well enough until you get to the drum solo in Still I'm Sad. Under the "it seemed like a good idea at the time" category you can hear Cozy play along to a tape of Tchaikovsky's 1812 overture finale. Unbelievable is the best you can say about that. But the only real miscue is Blackmore's little psycho/ego drama after the show is over and he's left on stage alone. Seriously, what does guitar smashing have to do with anything? But otherwise this is a great show and we already see glimpses of his future musical direction when he plays Greensleeves and bits of Bach, Beethoven and Gounod."
Blackmore & Company Smoke In Munich!
Barron Crist | Somewhere, USA | 06/20/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Recorded in Munich, Germany in 1977, Rainbow already had a strong following (gaining superstar status in Japan) mostly due to the fact the band's leader and lead guitarist Ritchie Blackmore had stunned audiences in the past during his tenure in Deep Purple with his soaring guitar solos. With a relatively unknown singer named Ronnie James Dio (originally with the band Elf) on vocals and an impressive list of band members including drummer the late Cozy Powell, Bob Daisley on bass and David Stone on keyboards Rainbow was destined to be huge. Just one listen to these two "live" discs will remove any doubt that the band was one to be reckoned with. The energy Rainbow possessed with their brand of hard rock on "Live In Munich 1977" can easily be compared to Deep Purple's "Live In Japan" album. The songs speak for themselves with a number of them being two to three times the length of their original studio versions allowing Blackmore to improvise on his guitar solos which are incredible. The sound quality of these discs are excellent and Eagle Rock Entertainment has done a good job remastering these discs giving one the feeling he or she is actually in the audience. Four of the songs included are from Rainbow's debut titled "Blackmore's Rainbow" ("Man On The Silver Mountain", "Sixteenth Century Greensleeves", "Still I'm Sad", "Catch The Rainbow"). One from Rainbow's second album "Rainbow Rising" ("Do You Close Your Eyes") and two from the third album "Long Live Rock N' Roll" ("Long Live Rock N' Roll" and "Kill The King") and "Mistreated" from Deep Purple's "Burn" album. An excellent two disc "live" set that all Deep Purple and Rainbow fans will want in their collection."
LONG LIVE ROCK 'N' ROLL!
M. Filipovic | Croatia | 08/29/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Yeah! I have been eagerly awaiting this DVD - and now I'm thrilled. THIS is the way music DVDs should be done. You can see the effort and care to make this DVD worthy of a legendary band.
First of all, "Rainbow - Live in Munich 1977", released just a few days ago, contains a whole concert, un-cut, with the running time of almost 2 hours! It was recorded on 20th October 1977, just a couple of hours after Blackmore was released from Austrian jail! But for the details of that interesting story, you'll just have to buy the DVD (can I now have a special discount, Amazon guys?) :)
Show is phenomenal, spectacular! I especially enjoy watching Dio, who really gives it all ...and David Stone (keyboards) is also amazing. The only thing which I dislike (REALLY dislike) - is the ending. Blackmore's little "performance" at the end is totally out of contest (and without good taste). You have to see it to believe it. For me, this concert is like beautiful fairy-tale with a dreadful end. But who knows, maybe you like it.
Picture quality is not so great, but it was recorded in '77, so... don't let that pull you away from buying this. Sound is GREAT - and you can choose between dolby stereo, dolby 5.0 and dts surround.
Sleeve and menu desings are just the way we like it - simple, but very, very nice. :)
AND... we get tons of cool extra stuff! Just the way we like it. :)
- 3 promo videos
- new interview with Bob Daisley (20+ minutes!)
- shorter interview with Colin Hart
- both interviews accompanied with old photos, video-shots, newspapers scans...
- nice photogallery
- narrative story about Rainbow (40 minutes!!) accompanied with static scenes from Munich show.
But my favourite "extra stuff" is not on the disc. Most music DVDs have none or one booklet. Here, we get 2 booklets! One is 6-page story about Rainbow and technical info about this DVD. The other one is 20-page faithful reproduction of the original Rainbow tour programme! Very beautiful, fantastic quality, lots of info and pictures.
This DVD is worth every penny, and much more. It's A-MUST-HAVE for any Rainbow fan, and it's an example how we want music DVDs to look like. Easily 5 stars for Rainbow and two thumbs up for Eagle Vision.
;)"
Run, don't walk, to get this: fantastic! :) [get the 2-cd se
Vince Palamara | South Park/Bethel Park, PA | 08/22/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Being a die-hard Ritchie Blackmore/ Rainbow/ Deep Purple/ Blackmore's Night fanatic (since 1981, when I was a mere pup at 15 and just starting to play guitar), I HIGHLY recommend this fantastic dvd. Like alot of afficianados, I had this on (pretty decent quality) bootleg vhs, but this is the ultimate: digital remastering, audio commentary, bonus promo films (all 3) from the album "Long Live Rock & Roll", etc. It is truly ironic that this concert was filmed for German tv (the Rockpalast show) on 10/20/77, the very night Lynyrd Skynyrd's plane crashed many hundreds of miles away, as a bit of rock history was also made by the Man In Back & Co. herein.
The late, great Cozy Powell excels on drums (I saw him twice: once with Whitesnake, once with ELP), especially during his "1812 Overture" drum solo, as does David (where did you go?) Stone on keyboards (again, especially during his spotlight solo during "Still I'm Sad"), while Ronnie James Dio is an opera singer throughout; truly amazing. Also, Bob Daisley does a nice job on bass and on background vocals, especially on "Catch The Rainbow." But what of the Man In Black, Ritchie Blackmore, you say? His playing is AMAZING---he is so on it is a wonder to behold; just the introduction to "Sixteenth Century Greensleeves" is worth the price of admission alone (he performs "Greensleeves" and Chet Atkins' version of "White Christmas", among other bit and runs; stellar). What is also nice is the fact that you can tell Ritchie and the boys are having fun during their inspired performance---Ritchie's 'dancing feet' with Bob Daisley (and smiles), his laughter at Ronnie during "Do You Close Your Eyes" when Ritchie comes in too soon (or was it too long?) for Ronnie, Ritchie's admiring gaze at Cozy after his drum solo, etc.
What else can be said? YOU HAVE TO GET THIS IF YOU ARE A BLACKMORE/ DIO/ RAINBOW FANATIC! 'Nuff said...oh, one more thing: get the accompanying 2-cd set, too!"