E.S.P. is the Bee Gees' seventeenth original album (fifteenth worldwide). Released in 1987, it was the band's first studio album in six years, and their first release under their new contract with Warner Bros. It marked the first time in twelve years the band had worked with producer Arif Mardin, and was their first album to be recorded digitally. The album sold well in Europe, reaching No. 5 in the UK, No. 2 in Norway and Austria, and No. 1 in Germany and Switzerland, though it barely made the top 100 in the US.
As they approached the two-decade mark, heavy-metal shock-rockers W.A.S.P. shot this 2000 concert film before a live audience. Recorded at the Key Club in Los Angeles, Califonia, W.A.S.P.: The Sting - Live at the Key Club - L.A. features the Blackie Lawless-led outfit performing several of their most popular songs including "Inside the Electric Circus," "Chainsaw Charlie," "Sleeping in the Fire," "Damnation Angels," "I Wanna Be Somebody," and seven others. ~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide
It takes a certain sort of band to fill Wembley stadium, one unafraid to embrace scale, flirt with pomposity, and perform the odd grand gesture. Watching Muse's live CD/DVD H.A.A.R.P recorded over two nights in June 2007 you're left wondering if Wembley is quite big enough to hold them. From the grand opening, when Muse ascend from an underground chamber and walk down a central ramp flanked by men in yellow chemical splash suits to Matt Bellamy's lengthy, florid turns at the grand piano, no opportunity is missed to make H.A.A.R.P seem anything less than a spectacle.