Jimbo Mathus
Blue Healer (Fat Possum Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Blue Healer (Fat Possum Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Body builder Thor tries and ultimately falls short in this rock and roll documentary.
The Complete Tony Bennett / Bill Evans Recordings (Concord Music Group / Fantasy). Review by Carl F Gauze.
A free form New Age band loves to jam and packs up their harp, hits the road, and parties like its 2004.
On the run from an assassin, international rock superstar Bené hides out in Los Angeles and prepares for a showdown with death. But he cannot fool death; for death knows that Bené microwaves his soup.
The Minstrel In The Gallery (La Grande Edition) (Parlophone). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Blow Up the Moon (Loud & Proud Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Explicit torture in the middle ages leads to death, dismemberment and a new found respect for the American justice system and the inquisition.
A young man meets an aging gunfighter in a frontier town and learns the basics of killing in this stylish version of Oedipus West.
FM (Easy Star Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
A Craigslist date turns really weird. And then the seahorses kick in…
Big Music (Caroline). Review by Carl F Gauze.
New Orleans oddballs wander through life, bars and bad romances.
Agitation Systems (42°53’N 74°46’E Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Nonplace Soundtracks / Scenes 1-25 (Nonplace). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Garrison Fewell explores the meaning of spirituality and jazz improvisation in 25 conversations with modern jazz greats.
Agoraphobic Ian lives in filth and disgrace, but is saved by a talking fungus and girl with a tolerance for vomit fetish.
Dubnobasswithmyheadman Super Deluxe Edition (Junior Boy’s Own). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Human Zoo ( Metropolis Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Midge Ure brings his Band In A Box tour to historic Mount Dora, Florida, where Michelle Wilson revels in ’80s nostalgia.
Lily and Generoso review director Kazik Radwanski’s poignant comedic drama Matt and Mara, which explores the emotionally nuanced relationship between two longtime friends.
Sejin Suzuki’s unorthodox Yakuza film, Tattooed Life (1965) makes its Blu-ray debut from Radiance Films.
Hang out with some cool musicians as they make a record in a mountain cabin in Appalachia.
A classic children’s show is set to a Hip Hop beat. Carl F. Gauze reviews P.Nokio: A Hip-Hop Musical at Orlando Family Stage.
Cascades, Cascading, Cascadingly (Missing Piece Group). Review by Judy Craddock.
Uncollected Noise New York ‘88-‘90 (Silver Current Records / 20-20-20). Review by Steven Cruse.
With her latest book, I Used to Like You Until…, staunch (small l) libertarian and free speech poster girl, Kat Timpf proves that she just might be the much-needed cooling agent required to extinguish today’s super-charged sociopolitical dumpster fire.