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1-50 of 77
- As the creative force behind Electric Light Orchestra and a singularly accomplished singer, songwriter, guitarist and producer, Jeff Lynne is one of rock's most iconic--yet mysterious--figures.
- Directed by Ian Thuillier this film is a portrait of the late lamented musician Rory Gallagher, it investigates the timeless qualities of the 'gentleman', his music and the unique approach of this authentic guitar hero. His contribution to rock music has had a significant impact on both musicians and music fans around the world, despite his untimely death at the age of 47. The film features rare tracks from Rory's formative years with his first band, Taste, and through his 25 year solo career as he single-handedly spearheaded the Irish rock movement, blazing a trail for other Irish rock bands including Thin Lizzy, U2, etc. With featured contributions from those who knew him best; Donal Gallagher (his brother and manager), Bill Wyman, Cameron Crowe, and his former band members to those who he inspired to become music greats themselves; The Edge, Johnny Marr, Slash.
- The first specially edited memorial episode featuring Jean's narration. This is a breathtaking sea adventure action animation. The story centers on a series of critical battles by the indestructible submarine, Nautilus, and the conflict between Captain Nemo and the Gargoyle. It's a shorter, more streamlined version of Nadia called "The Nautilus Story", which all but eliminates the filler arc and concentrates on the struggle between Nemo and Gargoyle. Some scenes in the more pivotal episodes are cut as well. The compilation series was made by Hideaki Anno, who was said to have been dissatisfied with the final result of the TV show. The Nautilus Story was only released in Japan on VHS and laserdisc.
- The story of the amazing local music scene created in a little tavern off busy Northside Drive in Atlanta. Filled with music clips and interviews with musicians and staff, the film highlights the cast of characters who found a home there under the watchful eye of owner/manager Ellyn Webb, making the Northside Tavern a melting pot for music lovers and a must-see destination for blues lovers from all over the world.
- Linda Martell is the first Black woman to perform at the Grand Old Opry, in Nashville, TN in 1969, at the height of the Civil Rights movement. To date, she is the most commercially successful Black female artist in country music history, with her country-western remake of the Winston's "Color Him Father" reaching as high as number 22 on country music Billboard charts. But unlike her male counterpart, Charlie Pride, and countless white female counterparts, Linda's success and legacy is often overlooked and rarely ever mentioned. Until now. Bad Case of The County Blues: The Linda Martell Story, is a story of what it means to have the courage to pursue your dreams. It's a story of how that courage may not exactly result in the future you might have hoped for, but is, without a doubt, all you need to find the purpose that you and only you were meant to walk in.
- The second specially edited memorial episode features Jean's narration. This is a breathtaking sea adventure action animation. The story centers on a series of critical battles by the indestructible submarine, Nautilus, and the conflict between Captain Nemo and the Gargoyle. It's a shorter, more streamlined version of Nadia called "The Nautilus Story", which all but eliminates the filler arc and concentrates on the struggle between Nemo and Gargoyle. Some scenes in the more pivotal episodes are cut as well. The compilation series was made by Hideaki Anno, who was said to have been dissatisfied with the final result of the TV show. The Nautilus Story was only released in Japan on VHS and laserdisc.
- Mercy Love & Grace is the story of six former combat veterans gathered together to train for their next mission: saving the oceans' coral reefs and in the process, saving themselves.
- In 1934, Georgia Tech came up to Ann Arbor to play the University of Michigan Football team. They had one demand - UofM must bench it's only black player, Willis Ward.
- Marlon Riggs and Peter Webster's thesis project reflects on the heyday of Oakland blues in the late 1940s and '50s, when an influx of African American shipyard workers mostly hailing from Louisiana and Texas arrived in the Bay Area. Combining vintage photographs, archival footage, interviews, and performances at venues like Eli's Mile High Club, Riggs and Webster chronicle Oakland's vibrant past while revealing an uncertain present.
- The third and final specially edited memorial episode featuring Jean's narration. This is a breathtaking sea adventure action animation. The story centers on a series of critical battles by the indestructible submarine, Nautilus, and the conflict between Captain Nemo and the Gargoyle. It's a shorter, more streamlined version of Nadia called "The Nautilus Story", which all but eliminates the filler arc and concentrates on the struggle between Nemo and Gargoyle. Some scenes in the more pivotal episodes are cut as well. The compilation series was made by Hideaki Anno, who was said to have been dissatisfied with the final result of the TV show. The Nautilus Story was only released in Japan on VHS and laserdisc.
- A Rock and Roll story of survival by Fito de la Parra, from the cafes and road houses of Mexico to Woodstock and beyond.
- This documentary chronicles the birth of the "electric, urban blues" at Chicago's Maxwell Street where the blues became 'electrified' out of necessity, thus creating a new style of music that led to rock & roll.
- Sevdah, one of the world's extraordinary music forms, is an expression of a people recovering from a brutal past. The film is a view into a world of beauty and harrowing darkness addressing cultural identity and barbarism.
- A very short story of the invention of the International Klein Blue created in 1947 by French artist Yves Klein, as told by French press cartoonist Xavier Delucq.
- Phoenix Blues documents the history Bob Tate Jr. and the Musicians he worked with from the 30's to the 80's. The story takes place at Bob Tate Sr.'s steakhouse Bob's Rose Room where Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway and Joe Louis patronized.