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Interview: Executive Producers

Typically, TV crossover events involve shows that are in the same genre or franchise. Good examples would be Grey’s Anatomy, which shared a story with its own spinoff, Private Practice, or episodes of CSI that combined characters from that franchise’s various series. Accordingly, this TV season’s crossover between FOX’s Sleepy Hollow and Bones is a rare exception. Aside from their comedic undertones and...

DVD Review: James Cameron’s Story of Science Fiction
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DVD Review: James Cameron’s Story of Science Fiction

It’s a lofty, ambitious, attention-grabbing title: James Cameron’s Story of Science Fiction. But in reality, it’s best to approach this six-part documentary series (which originally aired on AMC in 2018, but is now receiving a home video release July 28, 2020) with reasonably low expectations. Ken Burns territory this ain’t. Story of Science Fiction plays...

Music Reviews: Brian Wilson and Van Dyke Parks’s ‘Orange Crate Art,’ Plus Jenny Reynolds, Jason Daniels Band, Easy Love
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Music Reviews: Brian Wilson and Van Dyke Parks’s ‘Orange Crate Art,’ Plus Jenny Reynolds, Jason Daniels Band, Easy Love

Brian Wilson and Van Dyke Parks’s most significant and best-known collaboration was in 1966 for the Beach Boys’ legendary Smile album, which remained unreleased for decades, though a bit of its material surfaced on 1967’s Smiley Smile. Parks contributed lyrics for that project, which gave birth to such elaborately constructed classics as “Heroes and Villains.”  The pair teamed up again nearly...

Music Reviews: The Explorers Club, Plus Julian Taylor, Al Hendrix, Mark Fredson
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Music Reviews: The Explorers Club, Plus Julian Taylor, Al Hendrix, Mark Fredson

The Explorers Club, The Explorers Club and To Sing and Be Born Again. The Explorers Club, led by singer, songwriter, pianist, and guitarist Jason Brewer, haven’t exactly been prolific: until last month, they’d issued only three full-length albums since 2008. So it’s a bit of a surprise that the group—whose only original member is now Brewer—simultaneously released two CDs...

Music Review: Bob Dylan’s ‘Rough and Rowdy Ways’
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Music Review: Bob Dylan’s ‘Rough and Rowdy Ways’

Bob Dylan has a habit of showing up with guns blazing just when you think he’s starting to fade. In 1974, for instance, he followed a period that included relative disappointments like Self Portrait and Planet Waves with the stunning Blood on the Tracks. And a series of uneven albums in the 1980s and early 1990s preceded the arrival of...

Music Reviews: Jeb Loy Nichols’s Masterful ‘Season of Decline,’ Plus VickiKristinaBarcelona and Kristen Grainger
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Music Reviews: Jeb Loy Nichols’s Masterful ‘Season of Decline,’ Plus VickiKristinaBarcelona and Kristen Grainger

One benefit of reviewing records is that the job exposes you to artists you otherwise might never have encountered. Many of them are forgettable, but occasionally you stumble upon a soloist or group whose work is as stunning as it is obscure.   That’s the case with Jeb Loy Nichols, an American-born and -raised singer/songwriter who has...

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DVD Review: Room 9

The new Lionsgate horror release Room 9 opens with an elaborate, multi-format introduction. Flashing between seemingly random, bizarre imagery, the image frantically switches between all manner of film/video stock—it’s as if writer-director Thomas Walton had deliberately set out to out-do Oliver Stone at his Natural Born Killers extreme. The following story—muddled and unfocused—unfortunately doesn’t match...

4K UltraHD Blu-ray Review: Space Jam
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4K UltraHD Blu-ray Review: Space Jam

To coincide with the release of the all-new Space Jam: A New Legacy, starring LeBron James, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment has dusted off the original 1996 megahit Space Jam. They’ve spruced it up with an outstanding new 4K UltraHD edition that looks great, even if it exposes the limitations of the era’s live-action/animation combo. The...

Music Reviews: An Expanded Edition of the Grateful Dead’s ‘Skull & Roses’ LP, plus Crowded House and Reigning Sound
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Music Reviews: An Expanded Edition of the Grateful Dead’s ‘Skull & Roses’ LP, plus Crowded House and Reigning Sound

An Anniversary Edition of the Dead’s Second Live Album Like the Beatles’ so-called White Album, the Grateful Dead’s eponymous second concert LP (following 1969’s well-named Live/Dead) has come to be known by a description of its cover art: Skull & Roses. The record, which appeared in October 1971, contains performances from March and April of that year...

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Music Review: Paul McCartney – McCartney III

Arriving right around the mid-point of Paul McCartney’s third completely DIY album, McCartney III, is an extended song called “Deep Deep Feeling.” An elemental drumbeat kicks it off, followed by McCartney’s otherwise unaccompanied vocal. He’s singing about the duality of love and devotion (“The deep, deep pain of feeling”). Slowly other elements are layered in....