Wadada Leo Smith
Rosa Parks: Pure Love. An Oratorio of Seven Songs (TUM Records). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Rosa Parks: Pure Love. An Oratorio of Seven Songs (TUM Records). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Tales From The West. Review by Michelle Wilson.
Riverland (Red Beet Records). Review by Jeremy Glazier.
A young prince returns from college to discover both he and his widowed mother are screwed.
Rival gangs battle for turf as young lovers break a racial taboo.
Encore (Island Records). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
For his 47th feature, The Image Book, which won the first Special Palme d’Or at Cannes, Jean-Luc Godard continues to evolve cinematic language as he searches for the meaning and truth of image and sound.
Got It Togehter! (Future Fossil/Smog Veil Records). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Quiet Signs (Mexican Summer). Review by Christopher Long.
The King of Cult Movies gives us pinky violence with this Japanese classic.
Go Lucky (It’s Not Records). Review by Stacey Zering.
Life (Y&T). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
The Griot Swings the Classics (Bluclok Records). Review by Stacey Zering.
Waiting — The Van Duren Story (Omnivore Recordings ). Review by James Mann.
Generoso speaks with director, Talal Derki, about his Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature nominated film, Of Fathers and Sons.
The soul and jazz sounds of Orlando’s best jazz musicians invades the lobby of the Winter Park Playhouse.
We sing our way through the French Revolution.
More gore from the wizard of shock, Herschell Gordon Lewis.
With the thirty-fifth anniversary of debut album Whirlpool, UK shoegaze outfit Chapterhouse is back together again and touring the US as part of Slide Away Music Festival.
The Englert theater hosted Little Feat as they embark on their Last Farewell Tour.
Meiko Kaji’s katana is sharp and looking for revenge in Wandering Ginza Butterfly and its sequel, She Cat Gambler, a stylish pair of early ’70s action films.