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Roy Orbison and His Nashville Recordings, 20 Years After His Deathnew

With the 20th anniversary of Orbison's death on Dec. 6, and with the recent release of a career-defining box set, Roy Orbison: The Soul of Rock and Roll, it's an apt time to reflect on how several of pop music's most timeless and artful songs unexpectedly emerged from a small Nashville recording studio on 17th Avenue.
Nashville Scene  |  Michael McCall  |  12-05-2008  |  Reviews

Houston's Jazz Historynew

If you believe the internet, which you really shouldn't, Houston has no jazz history to speak of. In fact, if you Google "Houston jazz history," you get a bunch of pages about various Rockets playoff series with the Utah Jazz.
Houston Press  |  Chris Gray  |  09-09-2008  |  Music

A Look at Who Lead Belly Was and Wasn'tnew

Lead Belly: A Life inPictures is not merely a picture book at all, but is rife with brilliant essays and era-specific memorabilia that portray the complexity of the man who just might be America's finest folksinger – because he sang anything and was no purist.
Shepherd Express  |  Martin Jack Rosenblum  |  08-01-2008  |  Nonfiction

'Somebody Scream!' Revisits the Stakes of Early Rapnew

In Reeves' reckoning, rap began to fill the void left by a shrinking black-power movement in the late 1970s and early ’80s.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Raymond Cummings  |  07-29-2008  |  Nonfiction

The Greats of '68new

It may not get its due, but 1968 helped alter rock's reality.
New Times Broward-Palm Beach  |  Lee Zimmerman  |  07-29-2008  |  Music

The Truth Behind Composer Oliver Messiaen's Most Famous Worknew

An Ohio University music professor has debunked a number of myths surrounding the composition and premiere of French composer Olivier Messiaen's most famous composition, "Quatuor pour la Fin du Temps."
The Athens NEWS  |  Jim Phillips  |  05-27-2004  |  Music

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