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Steven Kurlander

Steven Kurlander: Spanish-Language Pizza Promotion Gives Some Heartburn

Steven Kurlander | Posted June 2, 2012

I'm a big fan of The Big Bang Theory, one of television's smartest sitcoms, ever.

In one of my favorite scenes an indignant Sheldon questions the "authenticity" of Luigi's Pizza after calling in his order -- in Italian -- and discovering the clerk can't understand a word.
...

Lisa Mirza Grotts

The Reign of Her Majesty the Queen Turns Sixty! Diamonds (and Genes) are a Girl's Best Friend

Lisa Mirza Grotts | Posted June 2, 2012

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It's hard to believe that Queen Elizabeth II ascended to the throne sixty years ago this February. In the words of the late historian John Grigg, "Elizabeth II deserves praise for having been a bastion of stability in an age of social...

Gary Hart

Is Progress Possible?

Gary Hart | Posted June 2, 2012

He who controls the meaning of words defines the debate. George Orwell, among others, understood this very well. 'All animals are equal. Some are more equal than others," for example. When ideological media chatterers demonized the very legitimate word "liberal," most Democrats substituted the word "progressive" to describe their policies...

Marshall Fine

Movie review: Wallander: The Revenge

Marshall Fine | Posted June 2, 2012

The first Wallander novels by Henning Mankell were published in Sweden in the early 1990s. There have been Wallander movies and TV series in Sweden, as well as a British adaptation with Kenneth Branagh as the depressed detective Kurt Wallander that played in the U.S. on Masterpiece: Mystery.

But Wallander:...

Rep. Keith Ellison

All-American: 45 American Men on Being Muslim

Rep. Keith Ellison | Posted June 2, 2012

"It's not what you call me, but what I answer to."
--African proverb

Although a decade has passed since Sept. 11, 2001, and the world has been abuzz about Islam and what it means since then, it is clear Muslim-Americans must tell their own stories.

Many have attempted to...

Fern Siegel

Stage Door: Clybourne Park

Fern Siegel | Posted June 2, 2012

Race is a complicated issue in America -- often unfairly reduced to PC dictates from the left or rabid anger from the right. A candid exploration of America's racial history -- and progress -- is ongoing. Obama's election as the first African American president made millions proud, but the discussion...

Catherine L. Tully

Breaking Pointe: Behind the Scenes Ballet?

Catherine L. Tully | Posted June 1, 2012

Dance lovers everywhere have been anxiously awaiting the debut of the CW's new series, Breaking Pointe, but the opening episode appears to be more of an introductory piece, rather than a true insider look at the ballet world. As part of the set up, viewers are taken into the...

Nicole Brittingham Furlonge

On the 'Public' Role of Love

Nicole Brittingham Furlonge | Posted June 1, 2012

Love is a democratic ideal. This notion of love is what Martin Luther King, Jr. called "the love that does justice," a love that intentionally supports and cultivates personal and systemic change towards equality, a love that is threatened as long as injustice thrives. In King's words, love holds social...

Debra Ollivier

Bob Balaban On The Magic Of Wes Anderson's Moonrise Kingdom

Debra Ollivier | Posted June 1, 2012

In the beginning of Wes Anderson's new movie "Moonrise Kingdom," Bob Balaban appears on a desolate New England island looking a bit like one of Santa's helpers. As the movie's narrator, he sets the scene for what's to come: an emotionally subtle but complex love story between two...

Michael Giltz

DVDs: Scorsese Stumbles, Cruise Soars and Much More

Michael Giltz | Posted June 1, 2012

Playing catch-up with some of the best (and most disappointing) releases from the past month, so strap in.

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George Harrison Living in the Material World ($24.98...

Lightsey Darst

The Poorest Art: Dance and Money (I)

Lightsey Darst | Posted June 1, 2012

I've come to a conclusion about dance and money: if dancers did not sometimes sleep with rich people, American dance as we know it would cease to exist.

Absurd and degrading as this conclusion is -- can you imagine the same being said of any other art form? -- the...

Annie Fehrenbacher

It's All Happening: The Beach Boys Return to the Bowl

Annie Fehrenbacher | Posted June 1, 2012

"Because it's hard to find someone you love who loves you -- but you can begin, at least, by finding someone who loves your love song" -- Dave Hickey, "Air Guitar"

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The Beach Boys on Ed Sullivan, 1964

Brian Wilson is God. If that...

Warren Adler

The Greying of America

Warren Adler | Posted June 1, 2012

The success of the movie The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel may yet prove to be the watershed moment when the movie industry gets the message that ignoring people over 60 is a profound marketing mistake, not only for the film business but for "everything."

For those not yet conversant with...

Tida Tippapart

New York Close Up: Mark ii

Tida Tippapart | Posted June 1, 2012

Conversation with Nick Ravich, co-creator and producer of Art 21's New York Close Up

It will be a great place if they ever finish it, said O. Henry.

Writing about the transitory state of New York City seems like an impossible feat, yet the city as subject...

David Trumble

Life Is Organic, Subjective and Entirely Individual

David Trumble | Posted June 1, 2012

Read More: Art, Cartoon, Drawing, Video

Hi everyone. Trumble here.

Two years into my life, I was trying to make sense of the world through drawing. I didn't always succeed, but like all two year olds I had a go.

Twenty six years into my life, and I've gotten slightly better at it. I have...

Jonathan Kim

ReThink Review: Snow White and the Huntsman - Game of Twilight Potter Rings

Jonathan Kim | Posted June 1, 2012

Earlier this year, the film Mirror Mirror took a stab at retelling the Snow White fairy tale. Directed by Tarsem Singh, the result was a largely tongue-in-cheek version that occasionally poked fun at fairy tale conventions, featured Julia Roberts chewing scenery as the evil Queen with an intermittent British accent,...

Phil Ramone and Danielle Evin

Dog Ears Music: Born in June Playlist

Phil Ramone and Danielle Evin | Posted June 1, 2012





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Flash Steinbeiser

Writer James Robinson Shines a Light on DC Entertainment's Latest Gay Superhero, Earth-Two's Green Lantern

Flash Steinbeiser | Posted June 1, 2012

He may be unmarried, but count DC Entertainment's Alan Scott as the latest addition to the growing pantheon of gay superheroes. Formally known as the Green Lantern of DC's parallel universe, Earth-Two (take a hike, Hal Jordan), Scott will shine his light as the leader of Earth-Two's premier...

Mike Ragogna

Go With Motion City Soundtrack's "Son Of A Gun" Exclusives, Plus Rudy Sarzo Speaks of the Devil and More

Mike Ragogna | Posted June 1, 2012

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Minneapolis' Motion City Soundtrack has a new album, Go, featuring their song "Son Of A Gun," which is being presented here exclusively along with an associated webisode with bandmates discussing its awesomeness.

Exclusive Webisode:

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Exclusive: Motion City Soundtrack "Son Of A Gun"

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A Conversation With Rudy Sarzo

Mike Ragogna: Rudy, how've you been?

Rudy Sarzo: I've been outstanding. How've you been, Mike?

MR: Not too shabby. Speak of the Devil -- your newly released DVD with Ozzy Osbourne -- has to evoke some really great memories.

RS: Yeah, I've been watching it. This is an official release of a video that we actually did 30 years ago. Everybody in the band -- Ozzy, Tommy Aldridge, Randy Rhoads, Don Airey, and myself -- we were really excited about making this video to document our Diary Of A Madman show for that tour, so we were all looking forward to making this. As most people are aware, Randy Rhoads passed away March 19, 1982, just a few months before we actually got to video the concert. Continuing for many reasons -- one of them mostly being keeping Ozzy occupied, because after the crash, he was in an extremely fragile mental and spiritual state -- it was decided to keep moving, keep him occupied, so that's one of the main reasons we continued the tour. In the process, Brad Gillis became our guitar player, so when you actually watch the show, it was the final show of the North American leg of the tour at Irvine Meadows with Brad Gillis in the role of Ozzy's guitar player...

MR: Watching this DVD, it's obvious that it's not just a document of the period, it's almost like you guys are bearing your soul.

RS: You hit the nail right on the head. When you watch this, you're not watching a regular show, a regular performance. This is... the best way I can describe it from being there and having to emotionally go into a certain place to have to perform, it's a celebration for Ozzy and a once in a lifetime physical collaboration with Randy Rhoads. Most of the music, except for 2-1/2 songs of the whole set, are music and songs taken from the Blizzard Of Oz and the Diary Of A Madman tour. It was the last tour that there was so much emphasis for Ozzy. After that, he put more emphasis on Speak Of The Devil, which was a re-recording of the Black Sabbath classics. Later on that year, he was promoting Bark At The Moon and so on. This tour on the DVD is the bulk of it from those two albums. It's also a celebration of the friendship we all shared with Randy. It's a triumph of the human spirit. To be able to continue with that tour, our mission, our purpose was to celebrate Randy Rhodes and that is what you are witnessing when you watch that DVD.

MR: What were the dynamics of the band, friendship-wise and musically?

RS: It all went hand in hand. You could not separate one from the other. I was blessed to play with Randy in Quiet Riot and Ozzy Osbourne, so I actually saw the metamorphosis of a young, local, guitar hero in Los Angeles in the music scene -- as we were playing in Hollywood -- eventually becoming the rock legend he became. From being able to bear his soul through his music... that's the license Ozzy gave Randy. He did not have that license as long as he was a local guitar player for Quiet Riot because we were at the mercy of the record industry. The record industry was dictating what they wanted to hear from bands like Riot -- we were playing the record company's game. As soon as Randy became a member of Ozzy Osbourne, Ozzy gave him the freedom to be himself. Randy asked him, "What do you want me to do, what do you want me to be?" Ozzy said, "Just be yourself," and that's where all of that music came from -- total creative freedom.

MR: I know you and Randy were very close, proof of that being in your book Off The Rails. Sure, it's about the band, but there's so much centered around Randy, you get the impression he was the centerpiece of the group.

RS: In so many ways, he was. He inspired everybody, he really did. If I had issues going on with the dynamics of the personalities, I'd call Randy and he'd put everything in perspective for me. I learned so much musically from him and also the human side of him. There are people I have played with who are no longer with us and I ask myself what would Randy do in this case, and I usually get the right answer.

MR: Then you'd moved on to Quiet Riot.

RS: I received a phone call after Randy passed away from Kevin DuBrow and he asked me if I would go in and record one song as a tribute to Randy Rhoads. The song was "Thunderbird," a song we knew. It was a song that Kevin and I performed together while I was in Kevin's band, DuBrow, just before he became Quiet Riot again. I would occasionally perform with Kevin at the time, so I was very familiar with the song. It was a song he wrote when Randy left Quiet Riot to join Ozzy, so it wasn't written after he passed away but it was recorded after he passed away. So as a tribute to Randy -- he was still a member of Ozzy at the time -- he did one particular song. Then when I went to the studio, Kevin asked me if I still remembered any of the other songs that we played in Quiet Riot or DuBrow together, like "Slick Black Cadillac" and "Love The Bitch" and so on. By the time I left the session, I'd basically done half of the album. That's how the whole thing came about. It was emotionally very, very hard for everybody to go on stage without Randy, and the best way we could deal with it was to get in and dig into our souls and just connect and through the music was a way of connecting with Randy. Not only were these songs that he composed -- and he left a lot of himself in his music--but also, these were the songs that we were playing with him just a few days before. So this was our way of connecting with his spirit.

MR: In 1989, you appeared on the Slip Of The Tongue album with Whitesnake and David Coverdale.

RS: Actually, I joined the band in '87. We toured the '87 album together, then in '89, we entered production and started recording the album and it was released in '90.

MR: How long were you with Whitesnake totally?

RS: I joined in 1987. I think we started the tour in '90, it was released in '89, and I was a member until my last tour with Whitesnake was in '94.

MR: And there were other projects such as M.A.R.S.

RS: That actually happened right before Whitesnake. That was Tony MacAlpine, Tommy Aldridge, and a vocalist named Rob Rock

MR: And let's not forgot your time with Dio.

RS: Yes, from 2004 until Ronnie passed away. As a matter of fact, we had a service, a memorial for him a few days ago, May 16. We got together -- Glenn Hughes, Doug Aldrich, Simon Wright. We reflected near his resting place.

MR: What are your thoughts on Black Sabbath?

RS: I'm a huge fan of both eras -- the Ozzy Osbourne era and the Ronnie James Dio era. They're both so different and both so inspiring. Their music is so incredible.

MR: Rudy, what advice do you have for new artists?

RS: Learn persistence. It's a whole different world out there. Don't ever forget the reasons you're playing. Don't ever lose your burning desire to communicate, to tell your story.

MR: Some people speak through their mouths, some people speak through their guitars.

RS: It's a language. You can put words in print, but once they come out of your mouth, they're just invisible. So is music. It's all created by vibrations. Using the right words at the right time will have the same effect as playing the right notes at the right time.

MR: Rudy, anything on the horizon that we should know about?

RS: Oh yeah, I have band called Animetal USA and we have a second album coming out in June that we're going to be touring in Japan and in some states in America and all over the world. It's anime-centric, so anybody who is a fan of anime, this is the band for you.

MR: Wait, we can't let you get away without talking about your expertise in anime and animation. How did you first get interested in the field?

RS: Well, I'm an evangelist, basically... for the musician. Back in the day, we would leave our video content in the hands of professionals that were hired by record companies with major, huge budgets. It could be a half a million dollars... like my last video! As much as you are the creator of your music, now, the creation of your videos can be left in the hands of musicians today. The same technology to create your audio is also there for you to create your video. By getting content using a high definition camera, using editing software like Vegas or Premier or something like that -- and I do basically video effects and 3D animation -- it's up to your imagination. The tools are in your hands or available to be in your hands.

MR: You created that 3D animation video wall that was used to open the Dio concerts in Europe.

RS: Yes, I did. That was my first jump into it. I did a lot of learning quick. I am fortunate that I have a lot of friends in the industry. I call them up and they give me advice and help me out with it.

MR: And let's not forget, you did the Working Man's Bass, the loop library for Sony Pictures.

RS: Yes. As a matter of fact, that was the first bass loop library that Sony released. It's still selling and I can still hear it in a lot of music on television and in films.

MR: Have I missed anything?

RS: You're doing a fine job.

MR: (laughs) I appreciate it, Rudy. This is our second interview together, and I love talking with you. You're just as happy and just as cool as before, and I really appreciate your time when you do this.

RS: Thank you, sir, I really appreciate it, Mike. I appreciate that you're green, you're solar-powered. It's so sensible. I can't wait until we're able to harness more of that for our country.

MR: Nicely said. Rudy, a big thanks here. Let's talk real soon, sir.

RS: God bless.

MR: You created that 3D animation video wall that was used to open the Dio concerts in Europe.

RS: Yes, I did. That was my first jump into it. I did a lot of learning quick. I am fortunate that I have a lot of friends in the industry. I call them up and they give me advice and help me out with it.

MR: And let's not forget, you did the Working Man's Bass, the loop library for Sony Pictures.

RS: Yes. As a matter of fact, that was the first bass loop library that Sony released. It's still selling and I can still hear it in a lot of music on television and in films.

MR: Have I missed anything?

RS: You're doing a fine job.

MR: (laughs) I appreciate it, Rudy. This is our second interview together, and I love talking with you. You're just as happy and just as cool as before, and I really appreciate your time when you do this.

RS: Thank you Sir, I really appreciate it, Mike. I appreciate that you're green, you're solar-powered. It's so sensible. I can't wait until we're able to harness more of that for our country.

MR: Nicely said. Rudy, a big thanks here. Let's talk real soon, sir.

RS: God bless.

Tracks:
1) Over The Mountain
2) Mr Crowley
3) Crazy Train
4) Revelation (Mother Earth)
5) Steal Away (The Night)
6) Suicide Solution
7) Guitar / Drum Solo
8) Goodbye To Romance
9) I Don't Know
10) Believer
11) Flying High Again
12) Iron Man
13) Children Of The Grave
14) Paranoid

Transcribed by Brian...

Ilana Teitelbaum

Why George R. R. Martin Should Write All TV Shows: A Geek Girl Watches Game of Thrones

Ilana Teitelbaum | Posted June 1, 2012

I've decided: I want every show I watch to be written by George R. R. Martin. (Except Mad Men. Mad Men is perfect already.) I suspect this might cut into his schedule, but hey, that isn't my problem, is it? (When I told a friend of mine about this new...

All posts from 06.02.2012 < 06.01.2012