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- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 14
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- MUSIC
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- DEADICATED (Arista). Mercy me, not ecology again. But --
- yes -- it's a save-the-rain-forest jamboree of 15 Grateful Dead
- tunes covered in rambunctious fashion by artists as diverse as
- Jane's Addiction and Suzanne Vega. Check out Warren Zevon and
- David Lindley taking Casey Jones down the track and Elvis
- Costello keeping Ship of Fools dead on course. But there's good
- work all around.
-
- LE MYSTERE DES VOIX BULGARES: VOL III (Fontana/Polygram).
- Voices, the name used by several women's choirs that sing
- traditional Bulgarian folk songs, has built a growing cult of
- listeners since its first U.S. release four years ago, and
- deservedly so. The a cappella harmonies use impossibly high
- pitches with exquisite precision. The effect is weird, beautiful
- and sometimes unearthly.
-
- PROKOFIEV: The Complete Piano Music, Vols. 1-4 (Chandos).
- For Sergei Prokofiev's centennial, Boris Berman has begun a
- welcome traversal of all this modern master's difficult solo
- piano music. It's safe to say of Berman -- whose strong
- technique is calculated to capture both the music's lyricism and
- its sardonic bite -- that his artistry equals his audacity.
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- ART
-
- HARRY LIEBERMAN: A JOURNEY OF REMEMBRANCE, Museum of
- American Folk Art, New York City. Forty-five paintings recalling
- the lost world of prewar European Jewry. Through Sept. 22.
-
- GREAT AMERICAN COMICS: 100 YEARS OF CARTOON ART, Museum of
- Fine Arts, Houston. Nearly 100 original cartoon panels
- documenting this whimsical and sometimes serious art form, from
- the turn-of-the-century adventures of Little Nemo through the
- goings on of Opus the penguin. Through Nov. 10.
-
- BOOKS
-
- BRIEF LIVES by Anita Brookner (Random House; $20). A woman
- approaching 70 grows reminiscent after seeing an obituary of an
- acquaintance 10 years older. The lives portrayed in this novel
- -- the author's 10th -- are hardly brief, but they radiate
- considerable strength and poignancy.
-
- PRESERVATION HALL by William Carter (Norton; $29.95). From
- its beginnings on the site of an obscure French Quarter art
- gallery in the early 1960s, Preservation Hall became an
- internationally renowned Mecca for traditional New Orleans jazz.
- This lavishly illustrated volume chronicles the personalities
- and music behind one of the most stunning, and improbable,
- success stories in the history of American entertainment.
-
- TELEVISION
-
- COVER TO COVER (NBC, debuting July 29, 11 a.m. EDT on most
- stations). This new magazine show targeted to women, with hosts
- Gayle King and Robin Wagner, will spotlight stories on such
- topics as fashion, health and parenting. The ones, presumably,
- that Oprah and Good Morning America have missed.
-
- PAN AMERICAN GAMES (ABC, Aug. 3-18). ABC Sports, shut out
- of the Olympics for a good while, will try to recapture the
- thrill of victory with more than 20 hours of coverage of the
- hemispheric competition, originating from Cuba.
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- THE NEW RANGE WARS (PBS, Aug. 6, 9 p.m. on most stations).
- The usually mild-mannered National Audubon Society got into hot
- water with cattlemen (and the Ford Motor Co., which pulled its
- ads from an earlier showing on TBS) with this hourlong report on
- the dispute between environmentalists and ranchers over public
- grazing land in the American Southwest.
-
- MOVIES
-
- DARK OBSESSION. Gabriel Byrne (Miller's Crossing) feels
- guilty; Amanda Donohoe (L.A. Law) gets horny. And everyone else
- in this English country house does what aristocrats do best:
- prove they don't deserve their status. Go to Nick Broomfield's
- NC-17 thriller for the redeeming prurient interest and stay for
- the acid-etched portrait of a man with too much time and blood
- on his hands.
-
- LIVIN' LARGE. Can a street kid with a nose for news become
- an anchorman at an all-white station? In this broad, funny
- fable, the answer is: guess! Senses of humor and human
- proportion have been lacking in recent black films, but writer
- William Mosley-Payne and director Michael Schultz find them
- both.
-
- THE REFLECTING SKIN. The exploding toad, the embalmed
- fetus, the man who incinerates himself . . . Had enough? Then
- skip Philip Ridley's hallucinogenic melodrama about weird
- doin's down on the farm. But do so at the peril of missing a
- gorgeously bizarre chamber of horrors that taps into the
- everyday hell of growing up lonely.
-
- THEATER
-
- THE MATCHMAKER. Dorothy Loudon, the original Miss Hannigan
- in Annie, blends truth and charm as Dolly Levi in the
- premusical version of Hello, Dolly!, artfully revived
- off-Broadway.
-
- MR. GOGOL AND MR. PREEN. How could Elaine May recover from
- the film fiasco of Ishtar? By returning to her roots in sketch
- comedy off-Broadway with this sweet, sentimental, intermittently
- delightful encounter between a lonely vacuum-cleaner salesman
- and his equally lonely old customer.
-
- ARTHUR. Sans Dudley Moore and Liza Minnelli but abetted by
- an abundant score and by amiable Broadway veterans Gregg
- Edelman (City of Angels) and Michael Allinson (Shadowlands) as
- a drunk and his butler, the comedy film turns musical at
- Connecticut's Goodspeed Opera House in East Haddam.
-
- IN LIKE HIM
-
- THE ROCKETEER. He died more than three decades ago, but
- Errol Flynn is the hottest new star in pictures. Kevin Costner
- makes a Robin Hood movie, and critics compare it invidiously
- with the classic Flynn version of 1938. Then there's The
- Rocketeer, set in that memorable movie year. The film's zestiest
- character -- swashbuckler, womanizer, Nazi agent -- is a thin,
- engaging caricature of Hollywood's most beloved rogue (played
- with a lovely, menacing silliness by Timothy Dalton). The
- Rocketeer, based on Dave Stevens' meticulously evocative comic
- books, mostly meanders where it means to soar. But Old Hollywood
- figures such as Howard Hughes and W.C. Fields are impersonated,
- and such aerial antiques as the Hindenburg and Hughes' Spruce
- Goose airplane are invoked as icons from a past so remote it
- seems like tomorrow. Flynn, of course, remains the most
- entertaining of these artifacts. And the most marketable. Anyone
- for a remake of Captain Blood?
-
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- BY TIME'S REVIEWERS. Compiled by Andrea Sachs.
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