Rock Bands & Pop Stars
The Supremes Fotos
Grupo:
The Supremes
Origen:
Estados Unidos, Detroit - MichiganEstados Unidos
Miembros:
Florence Ballard, Betty McGlown, Mary Wilson, Diana Ross, Barbara Martin, Cindy Birdsong, Jean Terrell, Lynda Laurence, Scherrie Payne, and Susaye Greene
Disco de The Supremes: «REFLECTIONS-DEFINITIVE DVD COLLECTION»
Disco de The Supremes: «REFLECTIONS-DEFINITIVE DVD COLLECTION» (Anverso)
    Información del disco
  • Valoración de usuarios: (4.5 de 5)
  • Título:REFLECTIONS-DEFINITIVE DVD COLLECTION
  • Fecha de publicación:
  • Tipo:DVD
  • Sello discográfico:
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Análisis - Product Description
NTSC/Region 0. Limited edition numbered digipak pressing. For the first time ever: the long-swaited official video collection from the #1 female group of all time. Diana Ross, Mary Wilson and Florence Ballard (and her replacement Cindy Birdsong) conquered the charts & then the world through their TV appearances. Their looks, their charm & of course their great hits burst from the screen & won over even the harshest critics. Now the fans can have it all over again, the original Dreamgirls doing their thing unlike any group before or since. This extraordinary DVD collection - their greatest hits on video in any form for the first time - Includes not only the classic appearances from the Ed Sullivan Show and Hullaballo, but incredible rare footage not seen since first aired more than 40 years ago. As a fabulous bonus, a click of the sub-title button will also reveal entertaining and revealing trivia about each clip. Then there's the DVD extras, the icing on the cake: additional rare clips of 'Baby Love' and 'Stop! In The Name Of Love,' early footage of the trio doing their first top 40 hit, and uncut footage from the documentary Anatomy Of Pop that includes an interview with Berry Gordy.As with all other UMe/Motown DVD collections, all audio has been significantly upgraded; where the group has lip-synced to the record,you'll now hear remastered stereo right from the Motown vault.
Análisis de usuario
37 personas de un total de 41 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Someday We'll Be Together...At Last!

At long last we have an official, remastered DVD collection of vintage performances of those fair maidens from the Motor City, The Supremes.

You can't go wrong with this budget-priced disc that showcases the glamour, poise, sophistication, beauty and unmistakable talent of these three (four) young ladies in their prime (or should that be primette??).

Every one of their Top Ten/Number One hits is here (with the exception of "Love is Like an Itching in My Heart" and "I'm Livin' In Shame").

The highlights are definitely the September 1966 Ed Sullivan Show performance of "You Can't Hurry Love" and the January 1967 Andy Williams Show appearance singing "Love is Here and Now You're Gone," though the latter would have been better had they sang live. All three look gorgeous in both clips, though. The low point would have to be the uninspired miming to "Stop! In The Name of Love" or the Mike Douglas Show debacle of "I Hear a Symphony" where Diana accidentally forgets the opening lyric and flubs another line.

My only complaint about this DVD is that a few of the clips should have been substituted with superior performances.

Yes, the "Reflections" clip from The Tennessee Ernie Ford Show is good but their earlier September 1967 rendering of the song on The Hollywood Palace may very well be the most electrifying performance of the Diana/Mary/Cindy era. The "Ernie" clip fails to showcase the background vocals that the "Palace" version boasts, with Mary Wilson clearly stepping up to the plate in the wake of Florence Ballard's departure. Mary is clearly wailing on this missing clip and all three girls look fantastic in their liquid silver gowns.

On a similar note, I was dismayed to find they chose to include the initial Ed Sullivan performance of "Love Child", from September 1968 to which they lip-synced, instead of the second one from January 1969. At the time, it may have seemed daring for the girls to perform sans makeup and wigs, dressed in street clothes. However, they delivered a much better version of the song a few months later when they sang it live with Mary and Cindy on backup instead of the studio singers who appeared on the record. This second version rivaled the studio version for drama and intensity, had better choreography and the girls looked much better visually in purple velvet pantsuits, which were casual enough to reflect the song's lyric yet still stylish enough to maintain their impeccable fashion sense.

These are minor complaints and we are lucky to have such a wonderful showcase from the 1960's Dreamgirls.

Now we need a Volume II that includes ALL their Ed Sullivan performances, the remaining Hollywood Palace appearances and whatever else the producers can legally get their hands on.

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20 personas de un total de 23 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Full Performances of the Legendary Supremes!!!

Diana Ross and the Supremes were one of the biggest musical acts of the 1960's, with 12 number one hits. They were everywhere, including countless televsion performances. And.....FINALLY...a selection of these performances is available on this DVD. These are the full songs...not just clips, and the sound and clarity are great.

Here are the Supremes, often imitated, but rarely suprassed....the beehive hairdo's, long eyelashes and the Motown dance moves. And, of course, there are the great songs, that still can still make you tap your feet and sing along. Seeing clip after clip of these songs, it's amazing to see just how many hits they had.

The clips are presented in chronological order, so you can see the evolution of the Supremes from excited young women in simple dresses at the beginng of their career to their sparkly glamour in the late 60's. But, as it is now legend, behind the scenes was not all glamour, and you can see the human side of the Supremes peek through their tight performances ...for instance, Diana messing up the lines at the beginning of "I Hear a Symphony" and a very tired Diana and The Supremes in "Someday We'll Be Together".

Unfairly, the backstage drama of The Supremes may have obscured their role in pop history, as nearly all successful singing groups had their own meltdowns. Hopefully, this DVD will help remind some, and introduce others, to these great performers. And, if we're lucky, get more of their performances on DVD

Análisis de usuario
8 personas de un total de 8 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- SUPREMES DVD IS TERRIFIC !

After waiting for years we are finally able to purchase a DVD featuring the greatest girl group ever, THE SUPREMES.

Everybody involved in this release should be commended for a job well done. The video and sound quality are superb except for "Come See About Me" (from The Steve Allen Show) and "Nothing But Heartaches" (from Hullabaloo.) No problem on my end. The other selections are truly outstanding and this is indeed a priceless collection.

I just hope we don't have to wait another twenty years to see more SUPREMES DVDs in the market. Maybe the next release should be the TCB and GIT television specials with The Temptations which have never been available before. Also I would love to have ALL THE PERFORMANCES from the ED SULLIVAN Shows in one DVD. This should include all the songs the girls performed including the non-hit material. Come On UNIVERSAL! Give us more SUPREMES the sooner the better!

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8 personas de un total de 9 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Quite interesting

Okay Dreamgirls fans, here is where it all began.

Most of the posters have described the content, so I'll just add some observations-

"Come See About Me" from a 1965 Detriot show called "Teen Town" is quite lively. As was the case when they did this on Ed Sullivan a few months earlier, Diana gets into what she's doing with some bug-eyed clowning (that she called "souling") that the Motown charm school would force her to stop doing a short time later. Plus, I've always loved Mary and Flo" "Hay hey hey heys" in this tune.

The version of "Stop in the Name of Love" is a real period piece, with some kids in a park surrounding our heroines diong the jerk and other popular dances of the day. Quite a howl.

The promotional "Love is Here and Now You're Gone" is one of the most interesting tracks here. Here, the gleesome threesome play table tennis as the song plays in the background, which soon degenerates into the tuneful trio making wild faces and doing some farfetched foolishness for the camera involving bubble gum and faux fisticuffs. A seldom-seen side of these sepia sirens (okay, I'm enjoying this a little too much).

Then there's the Ed Sullivan "Love Child" segment. This must have been jarring to audiences of the time as our heroines (temporarily) replaced their glamour-girl look for ghetto rags for the song's subject matter, and Diana has a hard time trying not to smile to match the theme of the tune. (Dreamgirl fans take note-this clip inspired the "I'm Somebody" segement in the movie).

With that said, enjoy it.

Análisis de usuario
5 personas de un total de 5 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- FINALLY!!!!!!!!

I have been waiting so long for a DVD of the Supremes, and it's finally here! After seeing clips of their performances here and there, it is nice to see so many in one place. All of the performances are wonderful, but I especially like the "My World is Empty" clip from Anatomy Of Pop with the birds-eye view of Detroit and the girls recording in Motown Studio A with members of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, truly an early music video! If you have visited Motown and stood in the middle of Studio A, you can really appreciate that performance! The thing I enjoy most about this DVD though is that there are plenty of early performances that truly show Flo and Mary's talent before Diana overshadowed the group. If you are a Supremes Fan or just interested in the history of Motown, you DEFINITELY need to purchase this DVD!