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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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1990-08-06
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Critics' Voices
MUSIC
THE MODERN JAZZ QUARTET: FOR ELLINGTON (East-West). Part hommage,
part re-invention, this is a ravishing tribute by one of the premier
jazz groups to one of America's greatest composers. The M.J.Q. pay
the Duke the ultimate honor: they don't just respect him, they make
him swing.
THE TRAVELING WILBURYS, VOL. 1 (Wilbury Records). They look and
sound a lot like George Harrison, Bob Dylan and other famous folk.
Could it possible be? The mystery is thin, but the sounds are
joyous, making this the good-time record of the year.
LOU REED: NEW YORK (Sire). Savage lyricism in the sharpest Reed
style, with a startling overlay of tough social commentary. A hard
rocker musically and, lyrically, a real nail spitter.
March 6, 1989
ROY ORBISON: MYSTERY GIRL (Virgin). This was going to be Orbison's
first original solo album in ten years: it turned out to be his
farewell. A little slick, but at least one tune, She's a Mystery to
Me (produced by U2's Bono), is the perfect valedictory.
April 3, 1989
BEETHOVEN: CELLO SONATAS 3 & 5 (EMI). The preternaturally gifted
cellist Jacqueline Du Pre exudes sensitivity and breathtaking
virtuosity as she teams up with pianist Stephen Bishop-Kovacevich on
this digital reissue.
May 22, 1989
PAUL McCARTNEY: FLOWERS IN THE DIRT (Capitol). McCartney goes back
to the future by returning to his old Beatles label and collaborating
with a shrewd, spiky co-writer, Elvis Costello. That Day Is Done
and My Brave Face show both these lads in top form, and the entire
album has a buoyancy that has eluded McCartney for years.
July 3, 1989
MAHLER: SYMPHONIE NO. 1 (Deutsche Grammophon). The young Lenny
reintroduced Mahler; maestro Bernstein now leads the Concertgebou
Orchestra in a re-examination of the composer's kaleidoscopic genius.
September 4, 1989
BOB DYLAN: OH MERCY (Columbia). He started the decade with a great
album (1981's Shot of Love), and closes it with another. The record
is structured like an intimate revival meeting between Dylan and
listener; there are messages of devotion and political sermons;
parables of the spirit and love songs; and, in Shooting Star, a
luminous benediction. Dylan continues to make heavy demands--these
ten songs are the most intensely introspective work anyone has done
in rock this year--but asks only what he brings from himself; some
reckless imagination, a sense of playful mystery and a full measure
of passion.
September 25, 1989
THE RCA VICTOR VOCAL SERIES. Maybe they weren't better in the old
days, but these digitally remastered recordings make a strong case
that the jet plane and over-booked schedules are enemies of vocal
grace. The first issues in this new project include Marian Anderson,
Leonard Warren, Rosa Ponselle, Tito Schipa and Jussi Bjoerling. The
Warren disk is an oddity, recorded live on a 1958 tour of the Soviet
Union, where the baritone's dark, sexy voice knocked 'em dead.
Ponselle's sublime vocal poise lights great Verdi arias and ditties
like When I have Sung My Songs to You, I'll Sing No More. Easily the
most joyous singer is Schipa, with his diaphanous tenor tones and
fluent ornamentation. There was a real nap on the operatic velvet
back then!
November 6, 1989
LINDA RONSTADT: CRY LIKE A RAINSTORM, HOWL LIKE THE WIND
(Elektra/Asylum). Ronstadt takes lessons learned from her three
successful albums of pop standards and puts them to work on the kind
of material she did so well in the '70s: confessional ballads and
songs of love gone amiss. The cathedral-filling orchestral
arrangements threaten the fragile structure of some songs, but
Ronstadt's singing (superbly accompanied on four tracks by New
Orleans soulster Aaron Neville) keeps everything on course.
November 27, 1989
RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL CHRISTMAS SPECTACULAR. Like its Rockefeller
Center neighbors--a towering fir tree and a glistening ice rink that
displays the endlessly watchable gyrations of amateur skaters--this
New York City bring-the-family pageant is one of the grandest holiday
traditions in the U.S. Satisfyingly the same from year to year, yet
spruced up just enough, the fast-moving script mingles Charles
Dickens, Santa Claus and Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker with carols and
hymns. The climactic Nativity scene features camels, donkeys and
other live animals. This year's production serves up dazzling
special effects and opulent costumes, as well as the show-stopping,
high-kicking Rockettes. If at times the narration suggests the
entire world is Christian, or should be, the overwhelming message is
joy and goodwill.
November 27, 1989