Star 69 Extended Mixes
Vol. 1 (Star 69). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Vol. 1 (Star 69). Review by Carl F Gauze.
The First Seven Inches Are Always The Hardest (Diaphragm Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Crimes Against Music (Zip Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Faceless (Republic). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Using highly paid consultants instead of a traditional “mom,” America picks up its bedroom and cleans out its closet. Carl F Gauze witnesses this trend with the aid of HGTV.
A Native American president! Fart jokes! Midget rentacops! Carl F Gauze takes a deep slug from this unhealthy bottle of urban surrealism and wonders if he’ll live to regret it.
Banda Sonora (Sound Track) (Accretions). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Electronomicon (Cleopatra Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
A woman and her son find solace in an apocalyptic cult… not necessarily light summer reading, but Carl F Gauze seems to have enjoyed it.
Love and death and Satanism play out against the bloody background of the Russian Revolution, and Carl F Gauze was there.
Food and Jazz attract the professional set to the Winter Park Farmers Market. Them, and Carl F Gauze.
Carl F Gauze delves into the past with this interesting collection of writing by prisoners from the 19th century.
A short film and demo on henna body painting in a dark and smoky bar. Just the sort of place you’d expect to run into Carl F Gauze.
The Sky Above and The Mud Below (Carrot Top Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Forty-five minutes of motocross jumps crashes, and other mayhem, backed with a metal sound track. Carl F Gauze wipes off the grit and squints into the camera.
I Am Not Job (WTLL Records Distribution). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Carl F. Gauze doesn’t need CSI, he’s got Heather Dune Macadam’s The Weeping Buddha, a tightly written muder mystery revolving around modern forensic science and traditional police leg work.
Michael Moore’s newest documentary examines guns and violence in America, and concludes a lot of people are dying. Carl F. Gauze locks and loads.
Houston, We Have a Drinking Problem (Honest Don’s). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
Down the Old Plank Road: The Nashville Sessions (RCA / BMG). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
John Badham’s 1983 future-tech helicopter thriller, Blue Thunder, with its cautionary tale of militarized police and a surveillance state, still resonates decades later.
What if the miracle of sight came with a curse? The Eye builds its horror from that chilling premise.
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.