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- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 30
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- MUSIC
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- BOB DYLAN: UNDER THE RED SKY (Columbia). "God knows the
- secrets of your heart," Dylan sings on this enigmatic new bit
- of introspection and social speculation. "He'll tell 'em to you
- when you sleep." Well, he's not talking much here, and Bob
- hangs back a bit too. Odd, edgy and, for all the slick session
- talent on parade (George Harrison, Elton John), somehow
- unfinished.
-
- THE KENTUCKY HEADHUNTERS: PICKIN' ON NASHVILLE
- (Mercury/PolyGram). Quirky, impolite country music by a new
- band that respects tradition but takes its own route back to
- the roots. Classics by the likes of Bill Monroe and Don Gibson
- are burnished with a hard-driving, honky-tonk brio that suits
- the Headhunters' original material just fine too.
-
- KIRSTEN FLAGSTAD. LAURITZ MELCHIOR. (RCA Victor Vocal
- Series). These companion albums feature two legendary singers
- with the temperaments and voices to sing Wagner as he might
- have imagined it in his inner ear. The love duet from Tristan
- und Isolde (from the Melchior recording) is pure rapture.
-
- BLUES YOU CAN USE
-
- Just when you thought your blues collection was complete,
- Columbia Records reaches back into its well-stocked vaults and
- brings forth a treasury of historic sides that helped lay the
- groundwork for modern rock, soul and rhythm and blues. The
- first eight releases in the ambitious ROOTS 'N BLUES series
- feature the work of such greats as Bessie Smith, Blind Lemon
- Jefferson, Big Bill Broonzy and Willie Dixon. But the most
- eagerly awaited offering is the boxed, two-volume (CD or
- cassette) set containing all 41 known takes by the legendary
- Robert Johnson, whose brooding, anguished voice and ringing
- guitar made him a cult figure for a generation of young
- rockers. As guitarist Eric Clapton puts it in a copiously
- annotated accompanying booklet: "I have never found anything
- more deeply soulful than Robert Johnson. His music remains the
- most powerful cry that I think you can find in the human
- voice." Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones is more succinct:
- "You want to know how good the blues can get? Well, this is
- it."
-
- THEATER
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- HAMLET. What do you do if your parents are George C. Scott
- and Colleen Dewhurst? If you are Campbell Scott, you go into
- the family business, appear on Broadway in Long Day's Journey
- into Night and on film in Longtime Companion, then scale the
- actor's Everest in this stirring production at San Diego's Old
- Globe Theater.
-
- FUENTE OVEJUNA. The Spanish classic of a feudal village's
- revenge against a tyrannical overlord took London by storm last
- season in an electrifying new translation that makes its U.S.
- debut at California's Berkeley Rep.
-
- TELEVISION
-
- COP ROCK (ABC, debuting Sept. 26, 10 p.m. EDT). The police
- action is rough and raw, like Hill Street Blues. But when a
- courtroom jury, asked for its verdict, breaks into song, we
- know we're not in Kansas anymore. Steven Bochco's musical cop
- show is the fall's most audacious newcomer.
-
- TWIN PEAKS (ABC, Sept. 30, 9 p.m. EDT). It's back to the
- weird Northwest to find out whether Agent Cooper survived the
- gunshots and whether David Lynch's cult series survived the
- hype.
-
- HEAT OF THE DAY (PBS, Sept. 30, 9 p.m. on most stations).
- For those who like their mysteries solved in one evening,
- Michael Gambon plays a suspicious stranger who latches on to
- a divorcee in World War II London, in this Masterpiece Theater
- drama scripted by Harold Pinter.
-
- MOVIES
-
- GOODFELLAS. The fellas -- Ray Liotta, Robert De Niro and Joe
- Pesci -- are anything but good in Martin Scorsese's homicidally
- funny portrait of a Mafia family. They kill, maim and rob; they
- rat on their friends or slit their throats. This vast fresco
- of criminal amorality is also a how-to book for making it big
- and gaudy in New York City.
-
- LANDSCAPE IN THE MIST. Greek director Theo Angelopoulos
- makes majestic visions out of spare images. In this
- metaphysical road movie, two children hike across Greece to
- find their absent father. A poignant but never sentimental view
- of childhood from a master of minimalism.
-
- WHITE HUNTER, BLACK HEART. In his portrayal of a director
- very like John Huston, Clint Eastwood subverts two rogue
- images: his own and that of a lovable auteur. He looks into the
- heart of maleness and finds equal parts arrogance and bluff.
-
- BOOKS
-
- JAZZ SINGING: AMERICA'S GREAT VOICES FROM BESSIE SMITH TO
- BEBOP AND BEYOND by Will Friedwald (Scribners; $29.95). A hip,
- informative look at the men and women who turned singing and
- swinging into synonyms.
-
- NOW YOU KNOW by Kitty Dukakis with Jane Scovell (Simon &
- Schuster; $19.95). What starts out as another sad story of
- anxiety and alcohol abuse by the wife of a public official
- eventually turns into a moving saga of courage as the author
- struggles to come back from a defeat far more humiliating than
- her husband's wipeout at the polls.
-
- ART
-
- INFORMATION ART: DIAGRAMMING MICROCHIPS, Museum of Modern
- Art, New York City. The millions of electronic elements in
- thumbnail-size microchips are so intricate that they must be
- plotted by computer on "road maps" 100 to 200 times the size
- of the chips. Put 31 of these plots on the walls of a museum
- and -- Eureka! -- you have an exhibition of colorful,
- exquisitely crafted designs that hold their own with many
- abstract paintings. Through Oct. 30.
-
- THE QUEST FOR SELF-EXPRESSION: PAINTING IN MOSCOW AND
- LENINGRAD 1965-1990, Columbus Museum of Art. What 43 Soviet
- artists have been up to since the post-Stalin "thaw." Through
- Nov. 25.
-
-
- By TIME's Reviewers. Compiled by Andrea Sachs.
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