Blog Post

Liza Minnelli and the Perfect Work of New York Art

Liza Minnelli’s recently reissued concert album, Live in New York 1979 (titled initially Live at Carnegie Hall), isn’t merely a concert album. It’s an artifact of 1970s celebrity culture, particularly 1970s New York celebrity culture. Gotham in that decade was a very different place from the gentrified Wonderland it is today. The city faced some of the worst financial stagnation in its history and saw rising crime waves. In a New York Times article, Edmund White wrote that New York the 1970s was “the last period in American culture when the distinction between highbrow and lowbrow still pertained, when writers…
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Gone To Carolina In My Mind

To the casual observer, any individual James Taylor album might feel more or less interchangeable with the others—both because his style has been remarkably consistent over the years, and because the gap in quality between his worst and best albums is pretty narrow. James Taylor has never made a bad album, just a few that have felt somewhat looser, less focused or less inspired, as well as a few that focus on covers rather than his typically powerful originals. This list, then—like all the others, if we’re being realistic—is for the fans, the devotees who’ve gobbled up every bit of…
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Natterings: Sorry This One Isn’t Funny

“So much time to make up Everywhere you turn Time we have wasted on the way…” David Crosby died yesterday. I am not a CSN(Y) fanatic. I like their stuff well enough; I’m not likely to ever turn off the radio when their songs come on. Especially since, being almost 55, I grew up with them. There is a certain specific sadness to watching the musicians you listened to in your youth die. My first gut punch was Neil Peart. I might have actually shed a tear or two, especially when I realized I could never see Rush live. That…
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She Was More Than Just Elvis’ Daughter

Lisa Marie Presley died on 12 January 2022 at the age of 54. The news was met with shock, given the (relatively) low profile that Presley maintained in the last few years. She interrupted her hiatus with her promotional efforts on behalf of Baz Luhrmann’s film Elvis, the musical biopic about her father, the late/great Elvis Presley. Her final public appearance was at the 80th Golden Globe Awards, which she attended with her mother, actress Priscilla Presley, in solidarity with the film, which was up for several awards that evening.   Presley lived to be 54 years old, gifted over a…
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I Get Up, I Get Down: A Yes Song Countdown

In choosing the band name “Yes” in 1968, five young Brits aimed to personify the positive spirit of the ambitious music they wanted to make—expansive, adventurous, and full of possibility. Over the course of more than five decades since, the band has persevered through myriad lineup changes while releasing somewhere in the neighborhood of 200 songs ranging in length from half a minute to 22, and ranging in style from bleeding-edge progressive rock to mainstream arena rock to mild-mannered adult contemporary. It’s a rich catalog of songs of wildly divergent approaches (and quality) to explore and consider—which is why we’ve…
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2022: A Challenging Year With Fabulous Music

The year 2022 was a great year for veterans like Bonnie Raitt, Dolly Parton, Madonna, and Judy Collins, who made some of their best music in their later careers. Superstars like Harry Styles and Megan Thee Stallion each made a bid for legendary status with excellent releases, building on the successes of their relatively young careers. It’s been yet another challenging year, in what feels like a challenging era (seriously, since 2016, we’ve been cursed to be living in interesting times), music has been a source of escapism and fun in the face of some grim headlines. Though some artists…
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2022: Tom’s Top Ten

A great year for new music in my opinion, and a return to seeing live music for myself, i.e Jawbreaker/Smoking Popes/Dillinger 4, and Hanson/Allen, Mack, Myers & Moore (the latter being an evening for my wife), trimming it down to 10 for 2022 was no easy task, but here they are, in no particular order.despAIR Jordan – Before Your Wings Gave OutI'll forever be a sucker for modern bands who don't hide their influences from ’80s post-punk and shoegaze, and this Denver outfit are doing it better than just about anyone. They don't shy away from post-rock and psychedelic moments,…
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2022: Duke’s Top Ten, er, Nine

So, for those who have been reading my stuff for a while, this has been a rough few years. I’ve fought cancer, sepsis, and a pulmonary embolism. I’ve spent a lot of time in the hospital. What that means is out of the reviews I did manage for the Teeming Horde of DV Fans, a lot of them were older albums I was comfortable with. (And then there was the Kate Bush Artist Spotlight That Wasn’t An Artist Spotlight, for which I still owe Jason one review.) Because of that, I can’t come up with ten new albums for an…
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2022: Crazy Times

Twenty twenty-two was a year when it seemed like chaos reigned pretty much everywhere, and we were all spun in circles by the lingering uncertainty we’re forced to wade through every day. In the midst of it all, music once again proved to offer so much: a salve for the soul, a source of insight, a reason to dance. And while there wasn’t that one singular album that carried me through the year like there sometimes is, my Best Of 2022 list quickly filled up with an abundance of high-quality material. In that regard, one program note: several albums I…
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Colorful, Kinetic, Dangerous: Richard Fulco Explodes 1967

If the 1960s were a socio-cultural maelstrom, 1967 was the eye of that storm, the whirlwind inside of which a fertile popular music scene, the clash of generations, drugs, racism and political upheaval all collided hard with one another. If it feels like only one or two of those terms would need updating to capture the essence of the last few years in America, that might explain why Richard Fulco ’s new novel We Are All Together feels both very much of its time, and remarkably relevant. New Yorker Fulco’s previous novel There Is No End To This Slope followed…
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