Review "The Firesign Theatre will melt your brain and rearrange your DNA...if you re into that kind of thing." --"Weird Al" Yankovic About the Actor The iconic comic voices of the counter-culture generation, Firesign chronicled pop, politics, media, and technology in a tense one listener called the Future Inevitable. The Firesign Theatre has been compared to Kurt Vonnegut, Ken Kesey and Bob Dylan in their original use of language and to the surrealists in their psychedelic story-telling methods, including the time-and-space altering concept of channel-switching. The original records, intricately produced in multi-track recording, were designed for multiple listenings and meanings an audio theatre of the absurd. The Firesign Theatre s Peter Bergman passed away in 2012. Philip Austin died in 2015. Remaining Firesigns Phil Proctor and David Ossman have worked since then to preserve the long heritage of their collaboration. Their classic scripts were gathered in the book Marching to Shibboleth in 2013. All their major albums are still in print, some eighty hours of their early radio broadcasts have been released in the book/DVD set Duke of Madness Motors, and two matching volumes preserve their early radio plays (Exorcism In Your Daily Life) and stage plays (Profiles in Barbeque Sauce). A fourth book, Anythynge You Want To, captures three decades of variations of their epic Shakespeare send-up, plus an extensively annotated scholarly historical account of the adventures of Ye Olde Firesygne Theatre from 1600 to 2000. P.when('A').execute(function(A) { A.on('a:expander:toggle_description:toggle:collapse', function(data) { window.scroll(0, data.expander.$expander[0].offsetTop-100); }); }); About the Director November 2016 marked the 50th anniversary of The Firesign Theatre, whose founding members Philip Austin, Peter Bergman, David Ossman, and Philip Proctor came together on KPFK-FM in 1966 on Bergman s program Radio Free Oz. During their time together they released over 35 albums, including Don t Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me The Pliers, called the greatest comedy album ever made by Rolling Stone, described by the New York Times as a multifaceted work of almost Joycean complexity, and placed in the Library of Congress Archive of historic recordings. Dubbed The Beatles of Comedy by The Library of Congress, the four-man Firesign Theatre collaboration wrote and performed together for over forty years. Their early studio work for Columbia Records (1968-1975) remains their best known and most influential. Innumerable phrases from their albums have entered the English lexicon: What s all this brouhaha? More Sugar! What you don t mean won t hurt you! Not Insane! Forward Into the Past! Shoes for Industry! Your brain may no longer be the boss! See more
J**O
They Walk Again By Night! A Must-Buy for all FST fans. Get the real story, up to now!
There’s likely no way for anyone who was not young and in the thrall of the Firesign Theatre during the period covered by these DVDs, 1968-1975, to fully appreciate this amazing treasure trove of audio and video.If you are only lately come to FST please prove me wrong and buy this set in droves. Anything that puts coin into the remaining three Firesigns is a worthy endeavor indeed. They never achieved the commercial success they deserved, for they were truly, the Beatles of Comedy for that generation. Don’t believe me? It was the Library of Congress that said that.Sadly, they were compensated as if they were The Archies of Comedy, an American fictional garage band founded by Archie Andrews, Reggie Mantle, Jughead Jones, Veronica Lodge and Betty Cooper.If you know and love FST you’ve already ordered this. If you don’t know their work, I’d suggest getting the CD of “Don’t Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me the Pliers.” If you groove on that, you should then order everything else in their catalog, including this DVD set.You’ll get a recreation of their very first improv together, reprising the Oz Film Festival from 1966 on an edition of “The Les Crane Show” in 1968. Audio only.The infamous Jack Poet Volkswagon TV ads that ultimately led to Mr. Poet losing his franchise.“The Bob Sideburn News” and a, more or less, straight group interview from the “About a Week” show on CBS, 1971.A TV commercial produced for their label Columbia Records, 1972, pitching their albums as if they were used cars.“Martian Space Party,” a 27 minute concert film from 1972, previously only available as a VHS tape.A 41 minute movie of “Everything You Know is Wrong,” lip-synched to the album.A 63 minute B&W video of their stage show “Questions & Answers,” Live at UCSC, May 9, 1975, previously only available as an audio recording.Plus commentary tracks, picture galleries and a whole DVD of home movies shot by FST, Annalee Austin and Tiny Ossman shot between 1969 and 1975. And let’s not forget the amazing cover art by William Stout!
A**R
Disc 1 is brilliant stuff. I loved seeing Martian Space Party after ...
Disc 1 is brilliant stuff. I loved seeing Martian Space Party after only hearing the audio over th3 years. Disc 2 is exactly as described: home movies. No dialogue, Not at all funny. Even as a life-long fan I didn’t see the point. But disc 1 is worth the price of admission.
S**L
More madcap comedy
For Firesign Theatre fans, there is some material not on the vinyl albums.
J**G
Five Stars
Arguably the FST most interesting video release, a bit pricey though.
B**N
Five Stars
The end of an era.
D**O
Five Stars
A+++!!!
T**E
Five Stars
Great stuff
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منذ شهر
منذ 4 أيام