To the average listener hearing Jessica Pratt for the first time, it’s possible to mistake her for an artist from a different era. Her music sounds decades old, like an obscure artist unearthed from the dusty bin of a Midwestern antique shop. But this is not the Langley Schools Music Project, and Pratt is no Connie Converse. Born in 1987, the Los Angeles musician has been surprising people with her otherworldly indie folk since 2012. And now she’s returned with her fourth album, Here in the Pitch, out May 3 via Mexican Summer.
- 5/1/2024
- by Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
In the article series Sound and Vision we take a look at music videos from notable directors. This week we take a look at several music videos by Luca Guadagnino. Luca Guadagnino's films are vibrant and lush, pulsating with life and a heartbeat, like music. He is often one to curate his soundtracks carefully, with the likes of The Rolling Stones, Harry Nilsson, Captain Beefheart, Sufjan Stevens, Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, Thom Yorke and John Adams showing up on his soundtracks. Sometimes he chooses pre-existing tracks, but more often he asks his favorite artists to provide the sonic backdrop for his films. It is fitting that a few of the music videos Guadagnino directed are for tracks tailor made for his own features, starting...
[Read the whole post on screenanarchy.com...]...
[Read the whole post on screenanarchy.com...]...
- 4/22/2024
- Screen Anarchy
Pj Harvey paid tribute to one of her biggest influences, Captain Beefheart, by reading some of his poetry at a London art gallery a couple of weeks ago. The singer posted a video from the event to her Instagram.
The singer-songwriter — who befriended the pioneering art-rock bluesman, whose real name was Don Van Vliet, late in his life — recited a poem he wrote for her in 2001 titled “Man Can’t Anticipate Cat” at Michael Werner Gallery. The gallery is showing Van Vliet’s paintings in an exhibition titled “Standing on One Hand” through Feb.
The singer-songwriter — who befriended the pioneering art-rock bluesman, whose real name was Don Van Vliet, late in his life — recited a poem he wrote for her in 2001 titled “Man Can’t Anticipate Cat” at Michael Werner Gallery. The gallery is showing Van Vliet’s paintings in an exhibition titled “Standing on One Hand” through Feb.
- 2/8/2024
- by Kory Grow
- Rollingstone.com
Cat Power and Iggy Pop have teamed up for a new cover of John Lennon’s “Working Class Hero.”
The cover arrives as a single from an upcoming compilation album titled The Faithful: A Tribute to Marianne Faithfull, organized by In The Q Records, Bandbox, and the Women of Rock Oral History Project to help raise funds for Faithfull as she “recovers from Long Covid.” Thus, the version of the song that Cat Power’s Chan Marshall and Pop have delivered pays homage to Faithfull’s 1979 version of the song, with a driving beat and an ambient sense of tension.
Overtop, Marshall’s multi-tracked vocals carry Lennon’s powerful words, while Pop dips in throughout with spoken word lines, sounding almost like a late-career Leonard Cohen, proclaiming a solemn truth with a low, commanding growl. Listen to the single below.
In a statement, Marshall expressed her excitement to be part of the project.
The cover arrives as a single from an upcoming compilation album titled The Faithful: A Tribute to Marianne Faithfull, organized by In The Q Records, Bandbox, and the Women of Rock Oral History Project to help raise funds for Faithfull as she “recovers from Long Covid.” Thus, the version of the song that Cat Power’s Chan Marshall and Pop have delivered pays homage to Faithfull’s 1979 version of the song, with a driving beat and an ambient sense of tension.
Overtop, Marshall’s multi-tracked vocals carry Lennon’s powerful words, while Pop dips in throughout with spoken word lines, sounding almost like a late-career Leonard Cohen, proclaiming a solemn truth with a low, commanding growl. Listen to the single below.
In a statement, Marshall expressed her excitement to be part of the project.
- 12/5/2023
- by Jo Vito
- Consequence - Music
Iggy Pop brought Tom Waits out of hiding on the latest episode of his BBC Radio program, The Confidential Show. Over the course of two hours, the two gravelly-voiced rockers shared stories and took turns spinning records by the likes of Alex Chilton, Captain Beefheart, Jerry Lee Lewis, and C.W. Stoneking.
Other more contemporary song selections included Lil Mama’s “Lip Gloss,” Beastie Boys’ “So What’cha Want” and Frank Ocean’s cover of “Moon River,” all of which were chosen by Waits.
Lil Mama’s 2007 single “Lip Glass” “became a favorite of mine recently,” Waits explained. After the song concluded, Waits and Pop humorously recited the chorus themselves.
In introducing Beastie Boys, Waits remarked, “Every time I hear them, they get me off my perch.” As for Frank Ocean’s cover of “Moon River,” Waits said, “It’s a very usual cover and I love what he did with it.
Other more contemporary song selections included Lil Mama’s “Lip Gloss,” Beastie Boys’ “So What’cha Want” and Frank Ocean’s cover of “Moon River,” all of which were chosen by Waits.
Lil Mama’s 2007 single “Lip Glass” “became a favorite of mine recently,” Waits explained. After the song concluded, Waits and Pop humorously recited the chorus themselves.
In introducing Beastie Boys, Waits remarked, “Every time I hear them, they get me off my perch.” As for Frank Ocean’s cover of “Moon River,” Waits said, “It’s a very usual cover and I love what he did with it.
- 12/4/2023
- by Alex Young
- Consequence - Music
Tom Waits is set to reunite with Iggy Pop next month when they co-host a two-hour special on BBC Radio 6 Music.
Airing on Sunday, December 3rd, the show will see the two musicians trading personal anecdotes and playing some of their favorite tracks to each other.
A press release teased some of those stories, including the time when Waits hitched a ride to Los Angeles with songwriter eden ahbez, who composed Nat King Cole’s 1948 hit “Nature Boy.”
Meanwhile, Iggy Pop will recall how he once stumbled across Captain Beefheart eating breakfast in LA, but was “wise enough not to disturb him.”
Some of the songs that will be played during the special include Alex Chiltern’s “Bangkok,” Pauline Oliveros’ “Bye Bye Butterfly,” Frank Ocean’s “Moon River,” and Johnny Paycheck’s “Colorado Kool-Aid,” along with the first spoken word song that Waits heard on the radio and a...
Airing on Sunday, December 3rd, the show will see the two musicians trading personal anecdotes and playing some of their favorite tracks to each other.
A press release teased some of those stories, including the time when Waits hitched a ride to Los Angeles with songwriter eden ahbez, who composed Nat King Cole’s 1948 hit “Nature Boy.”
Meanwhile, Iggy Pop will recall how he once stumbled across Captain Beefheart eating breakfast in LA, but was “wise enough not to disturb him.”
Some of the songs that will be played during the special include Alex Chiltern’s “Bangkok,” Pauline Oliveros’ “Bye Bye Butterfly,” Frank Ocean’s “Moon River,” and Johnny Paycheck’s “Colorado Kool-Aid,” along with the first spoken word song that Waits heard on the radio and a...
- 11/21/2023
- by Eddie Fu
- Consequence - Music
Kesha was on the verge of a panic attack in the spring of 2020 when her aging cat Mr. Peeps brought over her headphones. She’d been spiraling a lot back then, like so many people, her anxiety mounting as the pandemic shut down the music industry — but she took her cat’s gesture as a sign that it was time to meditate. And in the midst of a guided meditation she’d done many times before, something shook loose.
“I had this really beautiful, scary, and intense spiritual awakening where...
“I had this really beautiful, scary, and intense spiritual awakening where...
- 4/25/2023
- by Brenna Ehrlich
- Rollingstone.com
One of Ahmet Zappa’s favorite memories of Captain Beefheart is the time he called the Zappa household to relate a particularly memorable dream.
“The fucking greatest [call] that ever happened to me was when he called and said, ‘Hell-ooooo, is your mo-other there?'” Zappa tells Rolling Stone, imitating Don Van Vliet’s signature warble. “‘Because I had a dream I wanted to tell her about.'”
Gail Zappa wasn’t home, but Ahmet couldn’t fight his curiosity; he asked the Magic Band leader what he’d dreamed of.
“The fucking greatest [call] that ever happened to me was when he called and said, ‘Hell-ooooo, is your mo-other there?'” Zappa tells Rolling Stone, imitating Don Van Vliet’s signature warble. “‘Because I had a dream I wanted to tell her about.'”
Gail Zappa wasn’t home, but Ahmet couldn’t fight his curiosity; he asked the Magic Band leader what he’d dreamed of.
- 7/9/2021
- by Brenna Ehrlich
- Rollingstone.com
A little more than four years after filmmaker Alex Winter started making a documentary about rock iconoclast and classical composer Frank Zappa’s life, the movie — simply titled Zappa — will premiere at South by Southwest. The festival will take place in Austin, Texas, between March 13th and March 22nd.
Although Zappa has been the subject of many films, Winter’s movie is unique in that it covers the artist’s entire life; he had access to the Zappa family’s vault of uncirculated and rarely seen footage. The film will include commentary from Frank,...
Although Zappa has been the subject of many films, Winter’s movie is unique in that it covers the artist’s entire life; he had access to the Zappa family’s vault of uncirculated and rarely seen footage. The film will include commentary from Frank,...
- 1/15/2020
- by Kory Grow
- Rollingstone.com
Released 50 years ago, on June 16th, 1969, Trout Mask Replica — the third studio album by Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band — still sounds like a tomorrow that has not arrived, a music created at a crossroads of sound and language so far distant it continues to defy definitive summation and universal translation. Guitars jut out at improbably severe angles in ice-pick treble, like broken bones slicing through skin. The drumming comes in a rush of agendas, U-turn spasms of loose-limbed time and tempo under melodies which, in turn, feel like they are yet only partially born,...
- 6/15/2019
- by David Fricke
- Rollingstone.com
What a year in rock music! There, I said it. Too much to take in. Like a rowboat taking in more water than I can bail out. I keep getting new music recommended to me by friends, publicists, old lovers, dudes on subways, songs blasting in hipster boutiques; freakin' new music was everywhere. I got tipped to U.K. acts such as punk rockers Sleaford Mods, poetry rapper Kate Tempest, and folkster Jake Bugg; there was a new pop rock opus by Dan Wilson, and soulful Brooklynite Selena Garcia, and much more. I could barely compile my "best of/favorites of 2014" list knowing that I'll probably discover even more music after I've completed it. But here goes...my ten favorite tracks from 2014, a few essential reissues, and my ten favorite albums, yes, albums, like on real heavy duty vinyl, with two sides and everything.
Singles:
"Brother" - Selena Garcia...
Singles:
"Brother" - Selena Garcia...
- 1/1/2015
- by Dusty Wright
- www.culturecatch.com
"He had a beautiful dish on each arm!" Yeah, Don Van Vliet, bellows like it is! The aggro-avant blues poetry of Captain Beefheart with his signature harmonica wails is an out take from the new Rhino Records box set Sun Zoom Spark: 1970-1972. It collects three of his Warner Brothers albums -- Lick My Decals Off, Baby, The Spotlight Kid, and Clear Spot plus a disc of previously unreleased tracks. Out on Tuesday, November 17th. Order it today!
- 11/13/2014
- by Dusty Wright
- www.culturecatch.com
"From Straight To Bizarre" : Zappa, Beefheart, Alice Cooper and La's Lunatic Fringe", will be released on DVD, February 21, 2012, including rare footage, archive interviews, location shoots, "...and the music that made it all worthwhile..." :
"...in 1968, musician Frank Zappa, desperate to remove himself from his original deal with Verve Records, set up the Bizarre and Straight labels with manager Herb Cohen.
"Records by Zappa with his 'Mothers of Invention' band would rub shoulders in the label's racks with releases by Wild Man Fischer, the all female 'GTOs', acapella gospel collective 'The Persuasions', the first clutch of 'Alice Cooper' records, Tim Buckley's 'Starsailor', live recordings by Lenny Bruce and 'Lord Buckley' and a whole lot more.
"But it would be a 1969 release by the Don Van Vliet aka 'Captain Beefheart', that would provide the 'art-statement' for which the Bizarre/Straight enterprise is remembered best, and which...
"...in 1968, musician Frank Zappa, desperate to remove himself from his original deal with Verve Records, set up the Bizarre and Straight labels with manager Herb Cohen.
"Records by Zappa with his 'Mothers of Invention' band would rub shoulders in the label's racks with releases by Wild Man Fischer, the all female 'GTOs', acapella gospel collective 'The Persuasions', the first clutch of 'Alice Cooper' records, Tim Buckley's 'Starsailor', live recordings by Lenny Bruce and 'Lord Buckley' and a whole lot more.
"But it would be a 1969 release by the Don Van Vliet aka 'Captain Beefheart', that would provide the 'art-statement' for which the Bizarre/Straight enterprise is remembered best, and which...
- 1/18/2012
- by Michael Stevens
- SneakPeek
This brief holiday week is about to come to a close. MTV News wishes you the best over the long holiday weekend, where hopefully you'll eat plenty of festive food, see "True Grit" repeatedly (because it's that good) and generally enjoying the final moments of the year that was. The MTV Newsroom Blog will be back on Monday (December 27), but until then, enjoy all the biggest moments from this week's posts, including nuggets about Paramore, U2, "Jersey Shore" and Keri Hilson.
» It was something of a tumultuous week for a lot of people, beginning with Paramore, who lost two members and are figure out how to move forward.
» There was chaos elsewhere in the music world, as the troubled "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" encountered another injury and more delays. This is a much bigger U2-related mess than the PopMart tour.
» It wasn't all bad news, as "The Sing-Off" crowned a champion.
» It was something of a tumultuous week for a lot of people, beginning with Paramore, who lost two members and are figure out how to move forward.
» There was chaos elsewhere in the music world, as the troubled "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" encountered another injury and more delays. This is a much bigger U2-related mess than the PopMart tour.
» It wasn't all bad news, as "The Sing-Off" crowned a champion.
- 12/23/2010
- by Kyle Anderson
- MTV Newsroom
It was close to thirty years ago that Don Van Vliet, a.k.a. Captain Beefheart, walked away from the industry that had made him famous and decided that he just wanted to paint. Not a week after the Captain’s death, Matt Damon insists that director Steven Soderbergh is ready to do the same thing.
Read more on Retirement? Say it ain’t Soderbergh!…...
Read more on Retirement? Say it ain’t Soderbergh!…...
- 12/23/2010
- by Tim Sweeney
- GordonandtheWhale
Late on Friday (December 17), the art and music worlds lost one of the greatest avant-garde members of their respective ranks. Don Van Vliet, who made a name for himself in the music world as Captain Beefheart, passed away at the age of 69, likely from complications due to multiple sclerosis (a disease he has struggled with since the '90s). For 25 years, Van Vliet carved out an incredible place in the music world, taking basic blues jams and morphing them into fusions of jazz, metal, prog and whatever else happened to wander into his line of sight. He was a true envelope-pusher, and certainly a singularity (only Frank Zappa rivaled his level of outside-the-box weirdness, but even he had some commercial instincts). After going through a number of incarnations of his magic bands and putting out his final album (1982's Ice Cream for Crow), Beefheart hung up the music spurs and...
- 12/20/2010
- by Kyle Anderson
- MTV Newsroom
Tom Waits has offered a tribute to the late singer Don Van Vliet, who was professionally known as Captain Beefheart. Vliet died last week at the age of 69 after a lengthy battle with multiple sclerosis. In an e-mail sent to The Los Angeles Times, Waits touted the 'Abba Zaba' musician's status as one of rock music's true innovators. "He was like the scout on a wagon train," he wrote. "He was the one who goes ahead and shows the way." Waits also insisted that Vliet (more)...
- 12/20/2010
- by By Justin Harp
- Digital Spy
The magic is gone. An American original, the musician and painter Don Van Vliet, better known as Captain Beefheart, has died. He was 69. Melding swampy blues, herky jerky rhythms and an absurdist sense of humor, Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band never sought out mainstream fame, but nevertheless profoundly influenced many performers who found it, from White Stripes to Nirvana to Tom Waits. Born in Lancaster, Calif. and raised in the Mojave desert, Van Vliet was an artistic child who, as he once told David Letterman, did not attend school beyond a half a day of kindergarten, though even that may have been too much. "If you want to be a different fish, you gotta jump out the school," said the...
- 12/18/2010
- E! Online
American rocker and painter Captain Beefheart has died at the age of 69. The star passed away on Friday, December 17, according to a representative for the Michael Werner Gallery in New York. His exact cause of death was unknown, although he had long been suffering from multiple sclerosis.
Born Don Van Vliet, the singer rose to fame in the 1960s with his own style of blues and rock, later influencing artists such as Tom Waits, Nick Cave and Red Hot Chili Peppers. He recorded under the moniker Captain Beefheart with his pals in the Magic Band until 1982, before gradually moving away from the music industry and focusing his efforts on his love of art.
He was a successful painter and drawer, and one picture by Vliet sold for $40,000 at the Michael Werner Gallery earlier this month. Paying tribute to the artist, a statement issued by the gallery reads, "Don Van Vliet...
Born Don Van Vliet, the singer rose to fame in the 1960s with his own style of blues and rock, later influencing artists such as Tom Waits, Nick Cave and Red Hot Chili Peppers. He recorded under the moniker Captain Beefheart with his pals in the Magic Band until 1982, before gradually moving away from the music industry and focusing his efforts on his love of art.
He was a successful painter and drawer, and one picture by Vliet sold for $40,000 at the Michael Werner Gallery earlier this month. Paying tribute to the artist, a statement issued by the gallery reads, "Don Van Vliet...
- 12/18/2010
- by AceShowbiz.com
- Aceshowbiz
Avant-garde rock pioneer Captain Beefheart, also known as Don Van Vliet, died Friday (Dec. 17).
Van Vliet, 69, died early Friday at a Northern California hospital, EW reports. He had been suffering from multiple sclerosis.
Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band never had a hit in the United States (a couple of the band's albums reached the top 25 in the U.K.), but his influence runs deep in rock 'n' roll. Artists ranging from John Lennon to Beck to Pj Harvey have sung Captain Beefheart's praises and covered his music.
Captain Beefheart worked closely with fellow rock outlier Frank Zappa, who produced the band's 1969 double album "Trout Mask Replica," a subject of critical adoration ever since its release. Both Van Vliet and Zappa were influenced by the blues, but any number of other sounds and influences (often clashing with one another) come through in Captain Beefheart's music.
"People like music to be...
Van Vliet, 69, died early Friday at a Northern California hospital, EW reports. He had been suffering from multiple sclerosis.
Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band never had a hit in the United States (a couple of the band's albums reached the top 25 in the U.K.), but his influence runs deep in rock 'n' roll. Artists ranging from John Lennon to Beck to Pj Harvey have sung Captain Beefheart's praises and covered his music.
Captain Beefheart worked closely with fellow rock outlier Frank Zappa, who produced the band's 1969 double album "Trout Mask Replica," a subject of critical adoration ever since its release. Both Van Vliet and Zappa were influenced by the blues, but any number of other sounds and influences (often clashing with one another) come through in Captain Beefheart's music.
"People like music to be...
- 12/18/2010
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Pop2it
Don Van Vliet -- better known as his music persona Captain Beefheart -- has died at the age of 69 due to complications from Ms. Born Don Vliet, the musician and artist was known for his early collaborations with musical kindred Frank Zappa, and for he and his backers Magic Band's experiements in rock, combining traditional pop musics like blues, garage rock and R&B with neo-classical and free jazz. Captain Beefheart released more than a dozen albums, with a couple live and anthology sets after he retired from music in 1982. One of the best known efforts "Trout Mask Replica" was...
- 12/17/2010
- by Katie Hasty
- Hitfix
Don Van Vliet, the pioneering and adventurous musician and artist who went by the name of Captain Beefheart and created such influential but unhinged albums as "Trout Mask Replica" and "Shiny Beast (Bat Chain Puller)," has died at the age of 69, reportedly of complications from multiple sclerosis. Captain Beefheart's music was a surreal, wildly experimental and often purposefully chaotic blend of rock, blues, jazz and psychedelia. The album considered his magnum opus, 1969's "Trout Mask Replica," was ranked fifty-eighth on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of...
- 12/17/2010
- The Wrap
Sad to say, Rolling Stone has confirmed with management that Don Van Vliet, who achieved rock ’n’ roll immortality under the name Captain Beefheart, has died. Naturally, the news sent us to YouTube in search of wild live concert footage with which to soothe the pain. Instead, though, we wound up alighting on these fascinating interviews with David Letterman from undisclosed dates a couple of decades back (dig the De La Soul music heading into the commercial break). In the first, Van Vliet rather endearingly describes his unorthodox upbringing (he spent a half day in kindergarten, then quit to focus on sculpture). In the second, he goes full beatnik shaman, slurring evocatively about ravens, vanilla ice cream, and the pope's pet dragon. Rest in peace, El Capitan.
- 12/17/2010
- Vanity Fair
Linda Perry, Penn Jillette, Akron Family and more remember late avant-garde icon.
By Mawuse Ziegbe
"Captain Beefheart" Don Van Vliet
Photo: Michael Putland/Getty Images
Avant-garde artist Captain Beefheart was given a heartfelt e-sendoff by several celebrity fans after he died Friday (December 17) at age 69.
After news of the passing of Beefheart, who was also known as Don Van Vliet, circled the world, a range of high-profile tweeters took to the social-networking site to type tributes to the late Magic Band leader and music game-changer.
Former 4 Non Blondes frontwoman and singer/songwriter Linda Perry wrote, "Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band ... Rip January 15 1941 - December 17 2010." She also included a link to the melancholic doo-wop track "I'm Glad" from the 1967 album Safe as Milk.
Comedian and illusionist Penn Jillette tweeted, "Captain Beefheart has died. Another inspiration & hero gone. He's been painting, no music for a while, but I still listen all the time.
By Mawuse Ziegbe
"Captain Beefheart" Don Van Vliet
Photo: Michael Putland/Getty Images
Avant-garde artist Captain Beefheart was given a heartfelt e-sendoff by several celebrity fans after he died Friday (December 17) at age 69.
After news of the passing of Beefheart, who was also known as Don Van Vliet, circled the world, a range of high-profile tweeters took to the social-networking site to type tributes to the late Magic Band leader and music game-changer.
Former 4 Non Blondes frontwoman and singer/songwriter Linda Perry wrote, "Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band ... Rip January 15 1941 - December 17 2010." She also included a link to the melancholic doo-wop track "I'm Glad" from the 1967 album Safe as Milk.
Comedian and illusionist Penn Jillette tweeted, "Captain Beefheart has died. Another inspiration & hero gone. He's been painting, no music for a while, but I still listen all the time.
- 12/17/2010
- MTV Music News
Avant-garde musician and visual artist battled multiple sclerosis since the '90s.
By James Montgomery
"Captain Beefheart" Don Van Vliet
Photo: Gijsbert Hanekroot/Redferns
Don Van Vliet, the man known around the world as Captain Beefheart, died Friday (December 17), according to his manager. He was 69.
The cause of Van Vliet's death was not immediately known, though several outlets were reporting it was due to complications from multiple sclerosis, which he had battled since the 1990s.
Van Vliet was an accomplished avant-garde musician and visual artist, who along with a constantly rotating crew of fellow oddballs — his handpicked "Magic Band" — bent the rules, melded genres and thoroughly weirded out much of mainstream America for nearly four decades.
The origin of his famous Captain Beefheart stage name remains somewhat cloudy (some say it came from a script he wrote with childhood friend/ rival Frank Zappa), but the impact it would have on...
By James Montgomery
"Captain Beefheart" Don Van Vliet
Photo: Gijsbert Hanekroot/Redferns
Don Van Vliet, the man known around the world as Captain Beefheart, died Friday (December 17), according to his manager. He was 69.
The cause of Van Vliet's death was not immediately known, though several outlets were reporting it was due to complications from multiple sclerosis, which he had battled since the 1990s.
Van Vliet was an accomplished avant-garde musician and visual artist, who along with a constantly rotating crew of fellow oddballs — his handpicked "Magic Band" — bent the rules, melded genres and thoroughly weirded out much of mainstream America for nearly four decades.
The origin of his famous Captain Beefheart stage name remains somewhat cloudy (some say it came from a script he wrote with childhood friend/ rival Frank Zappa), but the impact it would have on...
- 12/17/2010
- MTV Music News
He’s dressed in black, of course. Sipping beer and chain-smoking in the bustling barroom of the Groucho Club, a members-only watering hole frequented by London’s literary crowd, the Australian singer, songwriter and first-time novelist Nick Cave looks every inch the stylish career nihilist: coal black three-piece suit, dark silk tie, smart blue dress shirt with white collar. His ink black hair is combed back in a chaotic arc that droops just so whenever he leans over to stub out a cigarette.
The conversation is predictably grim. Mostly it’s about the rapacious lust,...
The conversation is predictably grim. Mostly it’s about the rapacious lust,...
- 1/10/1991
- by David Fricke
- Rollingstone.com
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.