APPARENTLY 375,000 people saw Robbie Williams' three-night-stand at Knebworth this summer.

But just in case he didn't add to his millions quite enough with all those ticket sales, you can now buy the CD, the DVD - and the extensive range of merchandise detailed within.

If you were one of that vast crowd, you'll know what to expect, and even if you weren't, there aren't many surprises - you get the hits belted out by Williams and band, complete with full brass section, army of backing singers, celebrity chum Max Beesley on piano, and even his mum making a guest appearance, to the kind of ecstatic crowd reaction that would quite impress your average fascist dictator.

With America having failed to be seduced by him, this surely must be the peak of his pop career, (it's hard to see what there's left for him to do, until they start having gigs on the Moon) and this record is certainly an honest document of what Robbie Williams does. Whether you love him or are sick of him, it's all here - from the mad-for-it egomaniac showman of Let Me Entertain You, to the jaded cynic sick to death of stardom in Come Undone (surely one of the oddest pop moments ever - Robbie singing "I am scum" to adoring cheers). He comes out on top in the end, with the inevitable mega-singalong of Angels and a plaintive appeal to his fans to grow old with him.

Updated: 16:34 Wednesday, October 01, 2003