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| Live at the Acropolis | 
enlarge | Actor: Kodo Studio: Red Int / Red Ink Category: DVD
List Price: $19.98 Buy New: $12.62 You Save: $7.36 (37%)
Buy New/Used from $12.62
Avg. Customer Rating:   (13 reviews) Sales Rank: 52698
Format: Color, Dvd-video, Live, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: DVD Number Of Items: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: 36862 UPC: 766923686294 EAN: 0766923686294 ASIN: B00006CXHH
Release Date: July 30, 2002 Theatrical Release Date: October 21, 1997 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews: Read 8 more reviews...
  Kodo Acropolis August 26, 2005 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
Very good to watch their performances but the show is broken up with Mickey Hart's commentary which is a bit irritating
  A Kodo Fan Will Still Love It March 28, 2005 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
Yes, there are flaws in this DVD, especially the audio. As mentioned below, the interspersed interviews and audience applause are at a much higher level than the performers in concert. But, there is enough of Kodo's performance brilliance to recommend this.
This is actually an American production of a Japanese video that had no Mickey Hart interviews. It combines that video with portions of an earlier Japanese Kodo video shot on a soundstage (you'll notice that the first piece, "Irodori", is not done before a live audience). Some pieces, "Miyake" and "Sankan-Shion", are annoyingly brief. But don't rush out to get the Japanese version. The pieces are edited in that one as well. And "Irodori", absent for the Japanese tape, is one of the finest pieces on the American DVD.
I watch this DVD often and I love the performances. "Zoku", "Akabanar", "O-Daiko/Yatai-Bayashi", and the memerizing "Monochrome", are presented in the entirety.
The photography is beautiful (although I agree with the reviewer below who didn't like the excessive close-ups), especially during "Monochrome" and Chieko Kojima's dancing during "Akabanar". There are too many cuts, however. Just when you're focusing on one performer's moves, the view cuts to another.
For a better production, check out Kodo's newest concert DVD, "Kodo: One Earth Tour Special". While, I don't like that concert quite as much (mind you, this is a relative statement), it is presented in its complete form, from the audience seating themselves to the end of the encore.
  Excellent for the ear and the eye March 12, 2004 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
This is a fantastic video of one of the most impressive Japanese arts that mixes music and stage. The men and woman that perform here spend years training and the rhythmic and physical drive of this performance is amazing. The video is well edited and the comments useful despite the fact that the interviewer (from the Grateful Dead) lacks any kind neutrality and that the questions he asks are rhetoric. But, fortunately he is not the one on stage, and the music and tradition of Japan survive! Watch it in a big screen and with speakers.
  Good semi-documentary, but not a concert film February 28, 2004 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
Like the two reviewers before me wrote, Kodo is/are great and their energy is very evident. I won't repeat the same flaws in the dvd as did the other reviewers, but I will add an additional let down of the dvd.Obviously the cinematographer and editors didn't know the taiko pieces or the concept of Kodo and taiko playing. There are wonderful close-ups of the various members only, there are an excess of them. I am also an aspiring taiko player and part of the essence of taiko is the beautiful flow of the players and their form. Anyone who has ever seen Kodo or any accomplished taiko group will marvel at the unison of the players' movements. They should be harmonious. In this dvd, there too few wide angle shots of the "whole ensemble". Especially in Zoku and Miyake (which is only about 10 second worth of filming), the essence is the view of all of the performers together. Taiko is not just auditory, but visual as well. On the plus side, the documentary portions were great. It's always good to see an insight to the performers and their craft. But if you are expecting a live Kodo performance from beginning to end, you will be disappointed. It's geat to see Kodo on film and to have them in your home, but... a little better marketing and honesty go a long way. If you see "live" in a title, it's okay to insert documentary portions, but don't cut short the performances. If memory serves, there's only a couple of songs that are filmed in their entirety. The rest are only excerpts.
  Great performance by the best taiko group February 19, 2004 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
I'm a taiko player and I think this DVD is excellent. The picture and sound quality of this DVD are good enough for me. I'm not an audio geek. I care more about the performances on this DVD than about the technical inadequacies. In particular, I enjoyed seeing different Kodo members playing different parts than what was recorded in the 1992 video titled Kodo. This 1995 Acropolis concert was recorded after Leonard Eto left Kodo and in it, Ryutaro Kaneko is the leading taiko player of the Eto's song Zoku. Kaneko's performance has a different flavor than Eto's but is just as great. (If you want to know more about Kodo, you should also watch the 1992 video "Kodo" and the 1983 video "Heartbeat Drummers of Japan.") The performances of Monochrome, Yataibayashi, and Miyake are masterpieces. No taiko group can play better than Kodo. You can feel their positive spirit in this DVD. I like Mickey Hart's interview segments between songs. He covers great material in those segments for Kodo fans. For example, he asks Kodo members about how taiko drums are made. He also talks about the different "flavor" that women bring to drumming. This was really great for me, as a taiko player, to hear and realize. His interviews make this DVD even more valuable. The only reason I don't give this DVD 5 stars is that three of the songs are cut short. It's especially sad that such a beautiful song as Miyake, with such beautiful form, isn't shown in its entirety. I wish I could see the whole thing.
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