INXS frontman Michael Hutchence’s 1997 death meant many still-coming-of-age fans were unable to see the Australian band’s magnetism live in its original form. “Live Baby Live,” an album of the band’s ...
A remastered concert film and a new documentary reposition the Australian band for the digital age. By Kristi York Wooten In the opening scenes of the concert film “Live Baby Live,” INXS bangs out ...
Six years to the day of Live Aid and five years and a day since the band supported Queen at Wembley Stadium, INXS headlined their own show at the famed venue to a sell-out crowd of 73,791 crazed fans.
INXS‘ 1991 concert film, Live Baby Live, has been remastered, remixed and restored for the first time for a new reissue out June 26th via Eagle Vision. Live Baby Live captured a 1991 sold-out show at ...
It's easy to forget how big INXS were back in the day. In the pre-grunge era of the late '80s/very early '90s, they were inescapable, with a clutch of such radio-ready singles as "Need You Tonight," ...
Eagle Vision today announced the release of Live Baby Live, the seminal live show by INXS from 1991, on digital download, 4K Ultra High Definition Blu-ray, Blu-ray and DVD on June 26th. The release ...
INXS’s legendary 1991 Wembley Stadium gig will be shown in cinemas for the very first time from November 14 2019. The show has been fully restored from the original 35mm print to create a new ...
INXS frontman Michael Hutchence’s 1997 death meant many still-coming-of-age fans were unable to see the Australian band’s magnetism live in its original form. “Live Baby Live,” an album of the band’s ...
INXS frontman Michael Hutchence‘s 1997 death meant many still-coming-of-age fans were unable to see the Australian band’s magnetism live in its original form. “Live Baby Live,” an album of the band’s ...
INXS frontman Michael Hutchence‘s 1997 death meant many still-coming-of-age fans were unable to see the Australian band’s magnetism live in its original form. “Live Baby Live,” an album of the band’s ...