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| Farewell Concert | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Tony Palmer |
| Produced by | Robert Stigwood |
| Starring | Cream |
| Cinematography | Willy Kurant Gabor Pogany |
Release date |
|
| Country | United Kingdom |
Farewell Concert is the live recording of the bandCream's final concert at theRoyal Albert Hall on 26 November 1968. Aside from the band'sreunion concert in 2005 it is Cream's only official full concert release on video. It was originally broadcast by theBBC on 5 January 1969. It was not released on video in the US until 1977. The opening acts for the concert were futureprogressive rock starsYes, who were just starting out, andTaste, an Irish trio led byRory Gallagher.
There are in fact several versions of this film. They are as follows -
Original theatrical release
Television version
In 2005, aspecial extended edition of the concert appeared featuring full versions of all songs separated from the narration and interviews. Lasting 80 minutes, it was released on the official DVD reissue. The new version featured digitally remastered sound and video including three bonus songs. A short clip of White Room from the second set (the film used the version from the first show), together with D.J.John Peel introducing the band onstage, was shown on the BBC1 programme "The Rock And Roll Years" in the late 1980s.[1]
In June 2014, it was given a Blu-ray / DVD release.
Album releaseIn March 2020, the concert was released as part of the live albumGoodbye Tour - Live 1968, being the first time the Royal Albert Hall concert was officially released via audio format.[2]Sadly the sound of this Royal Albert hall concert is much worse than the sound of the other 3 shows of this box set.
The original film has often been criticized for both its mediocre sound and visual effects:
The audio is a turgid sonic sludge. The visuals are even worse, with director Tony Palmer jerking the camera around as if this were an episode of NYPD Blue, layering the picture with dated and distracting psychedelic light effects, and providing far too many close-ups of Bruce's teeth (and almost no wide shots of the entire band).[3]
The band had performed two sets at the Albert Hall, but it is believed only the second set was filmed in its entirety. Several times during the performance, it is apparent that the on-screen shot is not in sync with the audio. In fact, in several songs, including duringGinger Baker's drum solo, he seems to change clothes at lightning speed due to careless post-editing, as well asEric Clapton playing two different guitars. This is because footage from both sets, with the band wearing different clothes and Clapton using aGibson Firebird for the first set, aGibson 335 for the second, were edited together. The BBC used four static cameras and two hand held cams, all recording onto video tape, whilst Palmer himself filmed footage at the front of the stage, utilising a 16mm film camera. The difference in quality can be detected easily during the broadcast. However, the BBC "Pete Drummond" version was better quality overall, and is the only version that has these 16mm film clips removed – the remastered release on the 2005 DVD presents both audio and video in excellent quality.[citation needed]
Ginger Baker himself has lashed out in an interview against theFarewell Concert video, stating: "Cream was so much better than that." Nonetheless, most Cream fans regard the actual performance with great enthusiasm, disregarding the poor quality of the video.