Beneath the Skin – Live in Paris

Beneath the Skin – Live in Paris is a concert video by Irish rock band The Cranberries from their "Bury the Hatchet" tour. Recorded on December 9, 1999 at the Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy on the band's stop in Paris, France, it was released on DVD in January 2001.

Beneath the Skin – Live in Paris
Video by
Released2 January 2001
Recorded9 December 1999
GenreRock
Length84 minutes
LabelImage Entertainment
DirectorMaurice Linnane
ProducerNed O'Hanlon
The Cranberries video chronology
Live
(1994)
Beneath the Skin – Live in Paris
(2001)
Stars: The Best of Videos 1992–2002
(2002)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

The DVD includes documentaries of the band and technicians, promotional videos for the singles from Bury the Hatchet ("Promises", "Animal Instinct", and "Just My Imagination") and live performances of "How" (1993), "Yesterday's Gone" (MTV Unplugged, 1995), "Hollywood" (1996) and "Saving Grace" (1999).

The DVD features the concert in Dolby Digital Stereo and Dolby Digital DTS 5.1 audio formats.

Track listing

  1. "Promises"
  2. "Animal Instinct"
  3. "Loud and Clear"
  4. "Ode to My Family"
  5. "The Icicle Melts"
  6. "Linger"
  7. "Wanted"
  8. "Salvation"
  9. "Desperate Andy"
  10. "Go Your Own Way" (Fleetwood Mac cover)
  11. "Pretty"
  12. "When You're Gone"
  13. "I Can't Be With You"
  14. "Waltzing Back"
  15. "Free to Decide"
  16. "Zombie"
  17. "Ridiculous Thoughts"
  18. "Dying in the Sun"
  19. "You and Me"
  20. "Just My Imagination"
  21. "Delilah"
  22. "Dreams"

Chart performance

In 2001, Beneath the Skin – Live in Paris peaked at number 2 in the Netherlands.[2]

gollark: Why do you need to know which is the first bit?
gollark: You can make a value negative and thus do subtraction using + and ! then, I'm pretty sure.
gollark: Oh, in that case, do you know about how two's complement works?
gollark: Well, subtract is just bitwise NOT and add 1, which I suppose isn't actually particularly bitwise.
gollark: There are bindings in pretty much every language for popular stuff, I'm sure.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.