Nobody really expected the Berlin Wall to come down in 1989, and so suddenly. Roger Waters especially, because he had once made a promise never to perform The Wall again after the 1980 tour until the bricks fell in Berlin. But they did, and Waters had no intention to renege on his promise. The Wall became a star-studded megaconcert to benefit the Memorial Fund for Disaster Relief, with larger bricks, bigger inflatable puppets, and a larger audience than any of the original Pink Floyd shows. There was always a contradiction in performing such a personal work in a stadium setting, but here it becomes especially acute when opening up the vocal tasks to a variety of artists. Bryan Adams is actually an astute choice for the c**k-rock swagger of "Young Lust," but Cyndi Lauper ruins the spare funk of "Another Brick in the Wall Part Two" with over-enthusiastic yelping. And you'll definitely want to skip Jerry Hall's reading of the background dialog before "One of My Turns" ("Oh my gawd, what a fabulous room! Are all these your guitars?" -- a piece known word for word by every Floyd fan out there), as she seems unaware that a microphone can be used for amplification. By running through the album track by track, a lot of the effect of the live versions wears thin, as it invites constant comparison to the studio album. But the trial scene is handled well, with Albert Finney, Tim Curry, Marianne Faithfull, Thomas Dolby, and Ute Lemper taking on the characters in Waters' psychological drama. It's fun, a nice document, but only makes you want to return to the original album. ~ Ted Mills, All Music Guide
I had the recorder running when the actual show was broadcast. Roger must have been Freakin out when Sinead screwed up and they had to start the song all over again.
I disagree with the reviewer, Ted Mills, except for the part with Jerry Hall. And I did think that Bryan Adams was perfect for his performance of Young Lust.
But, overall, I think this is one of the best live performances ever. Joni
Mitchell really brought tears to my eyes with her version of Goodbye Blue Skies. And all of the performances were excellent.
The only bad was Sinead O'Connor. What you see on the DVD is her rehearsal from the night before. She flaked at the actual.
Jerry Hall killed that piece. And this is only from hearing the sample above. I agree with the review - it leaves you wanting to go back to the original. When was last time *you* listened the the Wall in its entirety? Make a new year's resolution to get it on your "to hear" list!