Paul Winter
Light of the Sun (Earth Music). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Light of the Sun (Earth Music). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
When your arrangements are razor-sharp, your moods mercurial and psychedelic, and your melodies constantly off-kilter, you’re probably a Dutch band like Certain Animals.
Weird music from the south
The Parlor (Cornelius Chapel/Music Maker Relief Foundation). Review by James Mann.
A low-energy author heads out on a book tour that becomes more and more nightmarish as his life falls apart.
New Haven CT. Makes a pretty sound argument it’s pizza is better than New York or Chicago. And Detroit? Please. Have some respect.
Generoso reviews Preparations to be Together for an Unknown Period of Time, the mesmerizing second feature by Hungarian writer/director Lili Horvát.
Live at Ronnie Scott’s with Eddie Gomez and Jack DeJohnette (Resonance Records). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Tell Me How You Feel. Review by James Mann.
A playlist by Phil Bailey that takes a wrong turn into the funny and un-PC (even for the ’60s-‘70s) pastures of classic country music
Young Farjid has an exam, but dad wants her to deliver a package and pick up some cash. You can guess the rest.
Live at the BPC (JCA Recording). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
Meet the people who do more than rescue dogs. They rescue older dogs who are the hardest to place.
Guardrails. Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Music reviews covering the critical years of rock and roll from 1967 to 1973 by critic and band manager Michael Oberman.
Catspaw (Omnivore Recordings). Review by James Mann.
Threesome Vol. 2 (Lojinx). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
In spite of, or perhaps because of, the films’ budget and time restraints the filmography of William Grefé is not without considerable charm and which is masterfully captured in this four disc Blu-ray set from Arrow Video.
If I could use synesthesia to describe Woods’ music, I would say it sounds like sparkling pastel day-go colors.
Humo. Review by Stacey Zering.
Joe Jackson brought his Two Rounds of Racket tour to the Lincoln Theatre in Washington D.C. on Monday. Bob Pomeroy was in the area and caught the show.
A Beach of Nightly Glory (Metropolitan Groove Merchants). Review by Rose Petralia.
With only a week to go before powerful new feature Louis Riel or Heaven Touches The Earth premieres in the Main Slate at UNAM International Film Festival, Lily and Generoso sat down for an in-depth conversation with the film’s director, Matías Meyer.
Carl F. Gauze reviews the fascinating Mostly True: The West’s Most Popular Hobo Graffiti Magazine, a chronicle of forgotten outsider subculture.
The Winter Park Playhouse explores the life of George M. Cohan and his landmark contributions to the American Songbook.
Anthony Mann’s gorgeous monochrome western, The Tin Star, may have been shot in black and white, but its themes are never that easily defined.
Charles DJ Deppner finds Flipside to be a vital treatise on mortality, creativity, and purpose, disguised as a quirky documentary about a struggling record store.