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- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 23
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- MUSIC
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- JERRY LEE LEWIS: CLASSIC (Bear Family; import only). Enough
- Elvis. Jerry Lee's the once and future king of good ole godless
- rock 'n' roll. Here's heavy proof: an eight-CD box set of
- vintage Killer material, all recorded for Memphis' glorious Sun
- label between 1956 and 1963. In the set are 246 tunes, 30
- performances issued for the first time, each and every one a
- blisterer, including even The Marines' Hymn and Dixie, for
- Lord's sake. Jerry Lee classics are included too, of course,
- sounding as full of brimstone as ever. While Elvis became the
- perpetrator and victim of his own melodrama, Jerry Lee pumped
- away at his piano, howling at the devil and pining for glory.
- Whatever ultimate judgment awaits him at the gates, Jerry Lee's
- got that glory already, and a good bit of it right here in this
- box. (At Down Home Music, El Cerrito, Calif.)
-
- FRANK MORGAN: MOOD INDIGO (Antilles). Once touted as Charlie
- Parker's heir apparent, alto saxman Frank Morgan seemingly blew
- it all on a life of hard drugs, thievery and frequent jail
- terms. Released from prison in 1985, Morgan, now 56, launched
- a storybook comeback -- of which this outstanding album is the
- latest chapter. Ably joined on two tracks by trumpeter Wynton
- Marsalis, Morgan's soulful, driving sax proves that for a
- battle-scarred jazz veteran, playing well is the best revenge.
-
- NEIL YOUNG: FREEDOM (Reprise). Typical sore-throat
- vocalizing but unusually acute songwriting from a still ornery
- spirit. Along with a timely Rockin' in the Free World, two
- tunes with Linda Ronstadt singing harmony show that he's kept
- going these 20 years on heart as well as spunk.
-
- BILLY JOEL: STORM FRONT (Columbia). A monster hit album,
- with Joel's crazily catchy buzz-word history of the past 40
- years, We Didn't Start the Fire, plus nine other effortlessly
- obnoxious ditties that take on such subjects as glasnost and
- the plight of Long Island fishermen. The musical equivalent of
- a sociology lecture by Ralph Kramden.
-
- MOVIES
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- BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY. Tom Cruise comes of age an an
- actor in this impassioned panorama of life, death and rebirth
- in the Viet Nam years. If director Oliver Stone is almost
- breathless on the subject, he also packs enough power and craft
- to make Viet Nam fester on screen -- one more time.
-
- ROGER & ME. In this impish documentary about auto layoffs
- in Flint, Mich., filmmaker Michael Moore comes across as a
- Garrison Keillor with a movie camera. And a mission: to beard
- General Motors Chairman Roger Smith. The picture is sharp and
- funny. But did Moore have to make his adversaries look so
- stupid so he could look smart?
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- THEATER
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- JUAN DARIEN. A puppet musical? For adults? Unimaginable,
- perhaps -- but also spellbinding, in this richly mythic
- off-Broadway delight.
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- ROMANCE IN HARD TIMES. The libretto of this off-Broadway
- musical about the Depression is odd, but the score is one of
- the most memorable in years.
-
- JEEVES TAKES CHARGE. Edward Duke impersonates P.G.
- Wodehouse's magisterial butler, his dimwit employer Bertie
- Wooster and even a terrifying aunt or two in this one-man
- triumph in Cambridge, Mass.
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- TELEVISION
-
- AFTER THE WAR (PBS, debuting Jan. 7, 9 p.m. on most
- stations). Two boys -- one the son of a well-to-do lawyer, the
- other a German refugee -- meet in boarding school during World
- War II, then cope with postwar disillusionment in an eight-part
- Masterpiece Theatre drama written by Frederic Raphael (The
- Glittering Prizes).
-
- DRUG WARS: THE CAMARENA STORY (NBC, Jan. 7, 8, 9, 9 p.m.
- EST). Executive producer Michael Mann (Miami Vice, Crime Story)
- brings some zip to this docudrama about U.S. drug agent Kiki
- Camarena (Steven Bauer), who was kidnaped and killed in Mexico.
-
- POISON IN THE ROCKIES (PBS, Jan. 9, 8 p.m. on most
- stations). The clear streams of the Colorado Rockies have long
- been a nature lover's delight. But this probing Nova
- documentary shows how badly they have been contaminated by
- toxic debris from thousands of mines, the construction of ski
- resorts and acid rain.
-
- BOOKS
-
- GOODNIGHT! by Abram Tertz [Andrei Sinyavsky] (Viking;
- $22.95). Under the pseudonym he once used to smuggle his
- writings to the West -- which landed him in a Soviet labor camp
- -- this Paris-based Soviet emigre offers a rich,
- autobiographical story of crime, punishment, betrayal and
- resurrection.
-
- SOME FREAKS by David Mamet (Viking; $16.95). The playwright
- (Glengarry Glen Ross, Speed-the-Plow) turns essayist and brings
- off some witty, iconoclastic reviews of contemporary U.S.
- culture and politics.
-
- EXHIBITIONS
-
- THE OPULENT ERA, Brooklyn Museum. In the second half of the
- 19th century, wealthy women, many of them American, flocked to
- Paris couturiers to buy the fantastic creations of a now
- vanished world of craftsmanship. This excellent show, focusing
- on Worth, Pingat and Doucet, glories in clothes that were meant
- to be savored over an evening rather than snapped by paparazzi.
- Through Feb. 26.
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- Compiled by Andrea Sachs.
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