Sat 10 Apr 2004 John and Yoko. Her supporters are critical of lingering British dislike for the women they think stole their Beatle. by TIM CORNWELL, ARTS CORRESPONDENT, THE SCOTSMAN IF HE were alive today, he might well have approved. As Yoko Ono prepares to bring the most complete collection of … [Read more...]
Archives for 2004
PRESS CONF #12: Smell the Stupidity
Lotta traveling, lotta sleep disruption, good to be back. Britain was grand, especially the Elgar and the "adorable" little Fawlty Towers hotel I stayed at in Liverpool. Spencer Leigh invited me to appear on his Merseyside Radio show Saturday night with CP Lee, a very funny Dylan author from … [Read more...]
OUT AND ABOUT: No Gore Please We’re British
4 April 2004, 7.30pm Barbican Hall, London ELGAR: The Apostles LSO, Richard Hickox, conductor John Mark Ainsley, St John Alastair Miles, Judas Alice Coote, Mary Magdalene Claire Rutter, Blessed Virgin/Angel Teddy Tahu Rhodes, St Peter James Rutherford, Jesus (Brian) London Symphony … [Read more...]
PUT THE MONEY DOWN: (in a tin cup)
So I arrive in London last night after an interminable British Airways flight after watching SHATTERED GLASS, that movie about the NEW REPUBLIC fiction scandal, which I stuck with only because people like Chloe Sevigny and Steve Zahn were in it. Lead performance was pretty decent, it was the writing … [Read more...]
PETE TOWNSHEND: Sizes Up Entwistle
Q: But didn't hobnobbing with the glitterati and playing before the royal families of Europe feel uncomfortable? Even John Entwistle commented in 1970 that The Who had become "snob rock," and "the kind of band that Jackie Onassis would come and see"? Townshend: "I don't know if I was uncomfortable … [Read more...]
REASONS TO BE CHEERFUL: Eliza Gilkyson
Eliza Gilkyson LAND OF MILK AND HONEY (Red House Records) Topical songs from white folk are even more rare than they are successful, especially in a day and age when outrage is so commonplace. But rolling through a stack of CDs today in the car as I took my kids to school, I came across the lead … [Read more...]
LONDON REVIEW OF BOOKS: Thomson on Didion
This was easily the best thing I read all week, and easily the best thing ever on Joan Didion (don't think the AJ "access" password works, though): She has admitted coming of age in the time of male novels - 'big fish, Africa, Paris, no second acts' - and of feeling disconcerted at the scant space … [Read more...]
BSO CONCERT: Symphony Hall, March 16, 2004
Edo de Waarta, conductor Pierre-Laurent Aimard, piano DVORAK Piano Concerto IVES Thanksgiving and Forefathers' Day JANACEK Sinfonietta In person, de Waart reminds me of Bernard Haitink, a fellow Dutchman, although his conducting manner is less stodgy. This came out a lot in the Dvorak, which had … [Read more...]
NIGHT TRAIN TO NASHVILLE (Lost Highway)
DAVE HOLLAND BIG BAND: Zankel Hall, March 10, 2004
·· Taylor Haskins, Trumpet ·· Alex “Sasha” Sipiagin, Trumpet ·· Duane Eubanks, Trumpet ·· Chris Potter, Tenor Saxophone ·· Antonio Hart, Alto Saxophone ·· Mark Gross, Alto Saxophone ·· Gary Smulyan, Baritone ·· Robin Eubanks, Trombone ·· Jon Arns, Trombone ·· Douglas Purviance, Tromone ·· Steve … [Read more...]
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN: We Give You…
The Elizabeth Wurtzel of Motherhood, and the latest barometer of the New Yorker's decline. … [Read more...]
LET THAT JURY EAT QUICHE…
Matos posted … [Read more...]
A LEGAL MATTER: No Justice, No Quiche
The Sick-Child Delayed Rebuttal to Dorfman's Rebuttal: Martha Stewart on trial is a media event, the same way communists "on trial" fifty years ago was a media event. Plenty of celebs got singled out fifty years ago who were no more traitors to the country than Stewart is an inside trader. … [Read more...]
DOIN’ IT IN THE ROAD: Danger Mouse Signifies
If I weren't nursing my sick 3-year-old, I'd be all over this GREY ALBUM controversy. So let me toss up a few notes: Danger Mouse is an ingenious DJ, not quite an artist, but the record gives you a LOT to listen to, and a lot to think about. He should be celebrated, not persecuted. Because of "Grey … [Read more...]
OUCH: Dolorous Denunciation
David Denby, "Living in America," New Yorker (Jan. 12) Last fall, Denby, a film critic for the New Yorker, published "My Life As a Paulette," as in an acolyte of the late New Yorker movie critic Pauline Kael. It was his exorcism of the spell the witch cast on him even in death: an account of how … [Read more...]