| Released 2005 This DVD is jam packed with all kinds of stuff. 6 classic music videos + 2 brand new music videos, tons of home movies, subtitles and two audio soundtracks and commentary by Gary. Home movies include footage from Berklee, tour footage with Jeff Scott Soto, GSP live and the recording of SENTIMETAL. Bonus material are Making "Donut", Making "Excruciating Pleasures v.1", and Making "Left In the Dark". |
| music videos: Don't Come Crying To Me Animal Man Donut Traumatized In The Middle Crave (Live) Therapy Left In The Dark |
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| PLEASE READ BEFORE PURCHASING!!! This DVD is region free and NTSC only. It is a DVD-R. DVD-R's still have compatability issues with older DVD players. If the disc has no visible scratches, dust or finger prints and it skips, stutters, stops or doesnt play, you need to update your player. |
| from AMERICAL.com (3) Why do my DVD-Rs only play on some DVD players and not others? While the DVD Movie and Game discs you buy or rent in the stores appear to be "silver" or "gold", they are usually made from aluminum coatings, over a clear layer that has been mechanically pressed with pits or holes to encode the data that the lasers in the DVD players decode into music and video signals. DVD Video discs that are made this way do not require the light sensitive dye layer used in DVD-R discs, and so they appear clear on the bottom, or nearly so. They never have to be "burned". By contrast, the recordable DVD-R discs use a dark dye layer to absorb the higher powered laser in DVD burners to create the tiny pits or holes that encode the disc's data. This dye layer causes problems for some cheaper and older DVD players, but it is none-the-less required to "burn" the DVD-R. Most of today's DVD Players now are able to read both the clear bottomed DVD movie and game discs, and also the colored dye bottomed DVD-R discs. We have a page that lists over 200 DVD players now in the market, rating their DVD-R playing compatibility. Approximately 97% of today's DVD players actually being sold at the moment, can play DVD-R type discs, while about 86% will play DVD+R discs. When you count ALL THE PLAYERS still in use, then the numbers drop down to 47-60% compatibility... but the older machines are being replaced by newer more compatible machines pretty fast. You can see more info on DVD players and DVD-R/+R compatibility discussed below... As far as the "quality" of the DVD-R discs themselves, we constantly test our own generic DVD-Rs to ensure their high-quality, low-errors, and consistent workability with popular players and burners. We get far less than 1% of them returned. See our FULL list of all our general purpose DVD-Rs at... General DVD-Rs List |
| "Self Indulgence Is A Virtue" DVD |