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Joni Mitchell’s “Blue” Was Released During Carole King’s Run with “Tapestry” 50 Years Ago Today

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As you know, Joni Mitchell’s 1971 watershed album “Blue is number 1 today. When it was released 50 years ago, it never hit number 1.

The number 1 album at the time was Carole King’s Tapestry. It was in the middle of a long run at the top of the charts. Carole’s double A side single, “It’s Too Late” backed with ( or b/w) “I Feel the Earth Move” was on a similar run at number 1 on the Hot 100.

The era of the singer/songwriter, the female singer/songwriter, was now in motion. Also on the charts was Carly Simon’s “That’s The Way I’ve Always Heard it Should Be.” In the fall, Carly would release “Anticipation.” Carole would back with her “Music” album. The three ladies would be everywhere.

“Blue” grew over the years as a favorite, followed by Joni’s “For the Roses” album. But Joni wouldn’t have her biggest commercial success until 1974 and “Court and Spark.” The singles off that album — “Help Me” and “Free Man in Paris” — are her biggest hits ever, far bigger than “Blue.” But by then “Blue” was a must-have in every record collection, a classic.

And threaded through these albums were those by James Taylor, Neil Young, Jackson Browne, the guys from the singer/songwriter world, just as successful.

But that was all just one side of music. There was plenty of R&B. Besides Marvin Gaye, Aretha Franklin, and James Brown, 1971 was full of great soul singles. There was a dogfight on the charts between Jean Knight’s “Mr. Big Stuff” and the Honeycone’s “Want Ads” right now. Aretha had “Bridge Over Troubled Water” and “Spanish Harlem.” Marvin had the songs from “What’s Going On.”  The Jackson 5 was on top with “Never Can Say Goodbye” and the Temptations lived all summer on “Just My Imagination.”

This was an era when Black and white music shared the top 40. Al Green, the Staples Singers, the Stylistics, there was no end to it. The Dramatics’ “Whatcha See Is Whatcha Get” was just this gorgeous, rhythmic opera that I could not get enough of in the summer of 71. And it all lived together happily in my 14 year old head. That was the world “Blue” was born into 50 years ago today.

The next big anniversaries come up on July 3rd and 6th, the deaths of Jim Morrison and Louie Armstrong. Jim was 27, Louis was only 69.

 

Pop Starlet Lorde Will Follow Flop Single with New Album, Then Tour Next Year When No One Cares

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Pop tart Lorde has had a big flop single for the last couple of weeks called “Solar Power.” Downloads: 5,000, With streaming: 85,000.

So now what? Why, a new album, of course, named for the single. And then a tour next year when everyone’s forgotten about the album. Sounds like a plan. “Solar Power,” is produced, like everything else, by Jack Antonoff.

Plus the new album will be bio-degradable or something.

“I didn’t wanna make something that would end up in a landfill in 2 years, but more than that, I wanted to make something that symbolised my commitment to asking questions of our systems, and making stuff with intention and sensitivity,” Lorde said. “I’m calling it a music box. It’ll be the same size and shape as a CD, and you can buy it where CDs live, but this is something totally different. If you’re torn on which hold-in-your-hands, flip-through-the-pages thing to buy to best enjoy this album, honestly, I’d go for the music box.”

Whatever. The tour starts next spring in Nashville. This isn’t how things work. If the album is a bust in August– and look, even a hit album doesn’t last more than a few weeks anymore– she’ll have to have a new album in April 2022 or a hit of some kind to tour behind. Why not wait and release the album next February? Since you’ve already had a single that didn’t work?

Well, no one asked US! No word yet on whether Lorde will pick up where she left off with her anti-Israel sentiment.

Solar Power Tracklist:
1. The Path
2. Solar Power
3. California
4. Stoned in the Nail Salon
5. Fallen Fruit
6. Secrets From a Girl (Who’s Seen It All)
7. The Man with An Axe
8. Dominoes
9. Big Star
10. Leader of a New Regime
11. Mood Ring
12. Oceanic Feeling

Dan Rather’s Take on Jon Stewart’s COVID Rant: “The idea that science is the biggest threat to the planet is terribly irresponsible”

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Dan Rather is unhappy with Jon Stewart. The famed journalistand former CBS News anchor is taking issue with Stewart’s rant on Colbert regarding the Wuhan virus starting in a laboratory versus somehow emanating from bats. Stewart, surprising Colbert on live TV, turned into a right wing curmudgeon and blamed the sceintists in the Wuhan lab for creating the virus.

Colbert was appalled. So is Rather. He says so on his Substack newsletter.

Stewart said on the show: “I honestly mean this: I think we owe a great debt of gratitude to science,” Stewart said. “Science has in many ways helped ease the suffering of this pandemic ― which was more than likely caused by science.” He added, “Oh my God, there’s a novel respiratory coronavirus overtaking Wuhan, China. What do we do? Oh, you know who we could ask? The Wuhan novel respiratory coronavirus lab.”

“Can I say this about scientists?” he continued. “I love them and they do such good work but they are going to kill us all.” Let that sink in. Scientists are going to “kill us all?” Rather notes on his blog today that Stewart finished up by predicting how the world would end. “The last words man utters are somewhere in a lab a guy goes, ‘Huhuh! It worked.”

Rather is incensed. He writes: They idea that scientists have done some bad things in the name of research — such as the Tuskegee experiments. Scientists have been wrong. Science and technology have been tools that supported colonialism and oppression. Science does not release us from our moral responsibilities. All of this is the case because science is a human endeavor and scientists are human, subject to the same frailties and base instincts as any member of our species. But science is also a way of thinking, where we challenge our own dogmas and beliefs, where we change our minds and approach when the data show we were wrong.

“Stewart is playing into the trope of the mad scientist at a time when we need science more than ever to solve our more pressing problems — most notably climate change. The idea that science is the biggest threat to the planet is terribly irresponsible. It gives free license to all those who say, forget what we have learned, forget knowledge, forget seeing reality. And I fear this reasoning – or should I say “unreasoning” — has not only consumed the modern Republican party but is in danger of consuming an even broader swath of the American and global public.”

Here was Stewart’s rant:

“Masked Singer” Host and Follower of Louis Farrakhan, Nick Cannon Expecting 4th Child by 3rd Woman in A Year

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I’m trying to think of the Wikipedia entry for Nick Cannon. “Father of Mariah Carey’s twins, avowed anti-Semite and follower of Louis Farrakhan, host of The Masked Singer.”

And man who fathered four children by three women in 2021.

Cannon is apparently expecting his fourth kid of the year and seventh in total soon with a woman named Alyssa Scott. And she’s proud of it! She announced it, albeit in code, on Instagram.

Nick is not new to the maternity ward. This month he’s already had a pair of twins with another woman, and a baby last December with yet another willing participant. The twins are named twin boys Zion Mixolydian and Zillion Heir, because why not? And the December baby was called  Powerful Queen. I’m not kidding. Powerful Queen has a full brother named Golden.

And then of course there are the Mariah Carey twins Moroccan and Monroe, who are 10 years old and probably losing sleep about keeping all these birthdays straight.

Nick Cannon currently hosts Fox’s’ “Masked Singer” and for a time lost his job with Viacom hosting “Wild N Out” when it was discovered he was posting anti-Semitic videos to YouTube supporting Louis Farrakhan and calling Jews names. Do you remember that? That was less than a year ago.

But then, facing financial ruin as his brood was cooking, Cannon started a mea culpa campaign. He interviewed rabbi’s and asked for forgiveness. He never renounced Farrakhan or the Nation of Islam. His employers, who were making money off of him, eventually let it all slide.

Next up for Nick is a syndicated talk show in the fall. I guess the producers, Debmar Mercury, will offer day care. They should kick off the first episode with the mothers of all the kids. Mariah could sing the theme song.

 

First Round of Peabody Awards Including Oscar-Nominated Doc, “Time,” Plus Stephen Colbert, “Ted Lasso”

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The Peabody Awards are going to be given out all week, it seems, at 12 noon Eastern. Why is this going on for days? Who knows?

Anyway, the first round of winners includes the Oscar nominated documentary, “Time,” from Amazon Studios, which should have won the Academy Award.

Here’s the list. More tomorrow.

Entertainment
“The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” (CBS) Presented by Steve Carell
“Ted Lasso” (Apple TV+) Presented by Will Ferrell
Documentary
“Asian Americans” (PBS) Presented by Sandra Oh
“Time” (Amazon Studios) Presented by D. L. Hughley
Podcast/Radio
“Floodlines” (The Atlantic) Presented by Charlamagne tha God
News
“Full Disclosure” (KNXV-TV) Presented by Brittany Packnett Cunningham
“China Undercover” FRONTLINE (PBS / GBH) Presented by Hasan Minhaj
Children’s & Youth
“The Owl House” (Disney Channel) Presented by Kristen Bell

RuPaul, John Oliver, HBO Max, “Shark Tank,” “The Voice,” Oprah Among Critics Choice Winners for Real TV Awards

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The Critics Choice Real TV Awards are out, and the winners are an eclectic group. Among them: Oprah, John Oliver, “Shark Tank,” “The Voice.”

There are now several iterations of Critics Choiee all flowing from the mother ship for movies and TV. Those will be given out next January 9th on the CW Network with a lot of fanfare as they’re taking the place of the Golden Globes.

Critics Choice also has Documentary awards and a celebration of Black cinema, and one of Latin Cinema.

WINNERS FOR THE THIRD ANNUAL CRITICS CHOICE REAL TV AWARDS

 

BEST COMPETITION SERIES – TIE 

**RuPaul’s Drag Race (VH1)

The Amazing Race (CBS)

**The Great British Baking Show (Netflix)

Top Chef (Bravo)

Tough as Nails (CBS)

 

BEST COMPETITION SERIES: TALENT/VARIETY – TIE 

American Idol (ABC)

Legendary (HBO Max)

**The Masked Singer (Fox)

**The Voice (NBC)

World of Dance (NBC)

 

BEST UNSTRUCTURED SERIES

Crikey! It’s the Irwins (discovery+)

**Deaf U (Netflix)

Lenox Hill (Netflix)

RuPaul’s Drag Race: Untucked (VH1)

The Real World Homecoming: New York (Paramount+)

 

BEST STRUCTURED SERIES – TIE 

A World of Calm (HBO Max)

**Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives (Food Network)

History of Swear Words (Netflix)

Queer Eye (Netflix)

**The Oprah Conversation (Apple TV+)

 

BEST BUSINESS SHOW

Restaurant: Impossible (Food Network)

**Shark Tank (ABC)

Streets of Dreams with Marcus Lemonis (CNBC)

Undercover Billionaire (Discovery Channel and discovery+)

Wahl Street (HBO Max)

 

BEST SPORTS SHOW

**30 for 30 (ESPN)

Defying Gravity (YouTube Originals)

Last Chance U: Basketball (Netflix)

Peyton’s Places (ESPN+)

Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel (HBO)

 

BEST CRIME/JUSTICE SHOW

**I’ll Be Gone in the Dark (HBO)

Murder Among the Mormons (Netflix)

Murder on Middle Beach (HBO)

The Ripper (Netflix)

The Vow (HBO)

Trafficked with Mariana van Zeller (National Geographic)

 

BEST ONGOING DOCUMENTARY SERIES

American Masters (PBS)

Dear … (Apple TV+)

**Frontline (PBS)

POV (PBS)

The Circus: Inside the Greatest Political Show on Earth (Showtime)

The Vow (HBO)

 

BEST LIMITED DOCUMENTARY SERIES

**1971: The Year That Music Changed Everything (Apple TV+)

Amend: The Fight for America (Netflix)

I’ll Be Gone in the Dark (HBO)

Love Fraud (Showtime)

Murder on Middle Beach (HBO)

Secrets of the Whales (Disney+ / National Geographic)

 

BEST SHORT FORM SERIES

First Person (Snapchat)

**Issa Rae Teaches Creating Outside the Lines (MasterClass)

Lady Parts (ellentube)

OWN Your Vote (NowThis and OWN social channels)

Ready Jet Cook (Food Network Kitchen)

 

BEST LIVE SHOW

**Dancing with the Stars (ABC)

 

BEST CULINARY SHOW

Amy Schumer Learns to Cook (Food Network)

Magnolia Table with Joanna Gaines (discovery+)

Nailed It! (Netflix)

**Taste the Nation with Padma Lakshmi (Hulu)

Top Chef (Bravo)

 

BEST GAME SHOW

25 Words or Less (Fox/Syndicated)

**Jeopardy! (CBS Television/Syndicated)

Supermarket Sweep (ABC)

Weakest Link (NBC)

Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (ABC)

 

BEST TRAVEL/ADVENTURE SHOW

Men in Kilts (Starz)

Running Wild with Bear Grylls (National Geographic)

Somebody Feed Phil (Netflix)

**Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy (CNN)

The Great Food Truck Race (Food Network)

 

BEST ANIMAL/NATURE SHOW

**Life in Color with David Attenborough (Netflix)

Secrets of the Whales (Disney+ / National Geographic)

That Animal Rescue Show (Paramount+)

The Incredible Dr. Pol (Nat Geo WILD)

Wizard of Paws (BYUtv)

 

BEST LIFESTYLE: FASHION/BEAUTY SHOW

Haute Dog (HBO Max)

**Queer Eye (Netflix)

Shine True (Fuse)

Skin Decision: Before and After (Netflix)

Stylish with Jenna Lyons (HBO Max)

 

BEST RELATIONSHIP SHOW

90 Day Fiancé (TLC)

Couples Therapy (Showtime)

Indian Matchmaking (Netflix)

**Love on the Spectrum (Netflix)

My Love: Six Stories of True Love (Netflix)

 

BEST LIFESTYLE: HOME/GARDEN SHOW

**House Hunters International (HGTV)

Martha Knows Best (HGTV)

Property Brothers: Forever Home (HGTV)

Rock the Block (HGTV)

Selling Sunset (Netflix)

 

BEST ENSEMBLE CAST IN AN UNSCRIPTED SERIES

Top Chef (Bravo)

**RuPaul’s Drag Race (VH1)

Queer Eye (Netflix)

Crikey! It’s The Irwins (discovery+)

The Real World Homecoming: New York (Paramount+)

 

BEST SHOW HOST

RuPaul – RuPaul’s Drag Race (VH1)

Oprah Winfrey – The Oprah Conversation (Apple TV+)

Stanley Tucci –  Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy (CNN)

Padma Lakshmi – Taste the Nation with Padma Lakshmi (Hulu)

**John Oliver – Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

 

MALE STAR OF THE YEAR

Trevor Noah – The Daily Show with Trevor Noah (Comedy Central)

RuPaul – RuPaul’s Drag Race (VH1)

Stanley Tucci – Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy (CNN)

Guy Fieri – Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives (Food Network)

**Phil Rosenthal – Somebody Feed Phil (Netflix)

 

FEMALE STAR OF THE YEAR

Nicole Byer – Nailed It! (Netflix)

**Sandra Lee – Dr. Pimple Popper (TLC)

Michelle Visage – RuPaul’s Drag Race (VH1)

Padma Lakshmi – Taste the Nation with Padma Lakshmi (Hulu)

Samantha Bee – Full Frontal with Samantha Bee (TBS)

 

OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT IN NONFICTION PROGRAMMING BY A NETWORK OR STREAMING PLATFORM 

Discovery+

Disney+

**HBO Max

Hulu

National Geographic

Netflix

 

OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT IN NONFICTION PRODUCTION 

The Intellectual Property Corporation (IPC)

Jigsaw Productions

Renegade 83

**Sharp Entertainment

 

Steven Spielberg Will Make Some Movies for Netflix, But the TV Kind, Not the Blockbusters

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Steven Spielberg has made a deal with Netflix. But don’t get excited, he’s still making movies for Universal Pictures.

Spielberg’s Netflix deal is so his Amblin Entertainment can release smaller films with less box office potential on the powerhouse alternative platform. Netflix needs content, and Spielberg is content to feed the beast.

But there will be no Jurassic features or that kind of thing going to Netflix. This gives Spielberg and Amblin opportunities to do smaller, more personal films and get them a wide audience on Netflix– as long as the filmmakers as okay with it.

One title in that category might “Maestro,” Bradley Cooper’s film about conductor Leonard Bernstein and his wife Felicia co-starring Cooper and Carey Mulligan. This would be a perfect Netflix release preceded by a theatrical awards qualifying run. Another might be “The Fabelmans,” an autobiographical picture directed by Spielberg starring Michelle Williams and Seth Rogen, written by Tony Kushner.

So nothing has changed. If there’s ever a “Ready Player Two” or “Robopocalypse,” they’ll be going to theaters through Universal or whichever studio has the rights. Still, it’s a nice look for Netflix and Ted Sarandos to have Spielberg in the tent.

Bravo! Joni Mitchell Landmark Album “Blue” Is Number 1 on iTunes 50 Years After Its Release (Listen to Unreleased Demos Here)

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Tomorrow is the 50th anniversary of Joni Mitchell’s landmark “Blue” album. Cameron Crowe did a lovely interview with her yesterday in the LA Times.

“Blue” has just hit number 1 on iTunes, 50 years to the day after its release. Bravo! It’s also the number 1 Audio CD on amazon.com.

To celebrate the anniversary Rhino has released a digital 5 track EP of demo’s which you can hear right here on Spotify and YouTube.

“Blue” launched Joni’s classic period that went on to include “For the Roses,” “Court and Spark,” “The Hissing of Summer Lawns,” “Hejira,” and “Mingus.” It’s an extraordinary run of albums considering this was all after “Woodstock,” The Circle Game,” “Both Sides Now,” and “Big Yellow Taxi.”

In the interview with Crowe, there’s talk of Joni as producer of her own albums. What they don’t discuss is that with all those records, no producer was ever listed. Henry Lewy was always the engineer. It wasn’t until new editions of the CDs were released in the 2000s that Joni finally took producer’s credit. She did it all. When you listen to the albums beginning with “Court and Spark” she should get retroactive awards for producing. They are works of genius.

The “Blue” demo tracks will be included this fall on October 29th in a Joni Mitchell Archives set, vol. 2.

JONI MITCHELL
BLUE 50 (DEMOS & OUTTAKES)
Digital EP Track Listing

1. “A Case Of You” – Demo
2. “California” – Demo
3. “Hunter”
4. “River” – with French horns
5. “Urge For Going” – with strings

JONI MITCHELL ARCHIVES VOL. 2: THE REPRISE YEARS (1968 TO 1971)
Full Track Listing

Disc One
Joni’s home (late 1967/early 1968)
1. “Midnight Cowboy” – Version one
2. “The Dawntreader” – Demo with vocal overdub
3. “Song To A Seagull”
4. “Midnight Cowboy” – Version two
Jane Lurie’s Apartment, Chelsea, Manhattan, New York City, NY (late 1967/early 1968)
5. “The Way It Is”
6. “Turn Around” – Incomplete
Home Demo, Joni’s home (late 1967/early 1968)
7. “I Had A King” – Demo with piano overdub
8. “Roses Blue” – Demo with peacock harp overdub
9. “The Fiddle And The Drum” – Piano demo
Song To A Seagull Session, Sunset Sound, Hollywood, CA (January 24, 1968)
10. “Jeremy”
11. “Conversation”
12. “Both Sides Now”
13. “The Gift Of The Magi”
Jane Lurie’s Apartment, Chelsea, Manhattan, New York City, NY (early 1968)
14. “It’s Easy”
15. “Another Melody”
Live at Canterbury House, Ann Arbor, MI (March 10, 1968)
16. Introduction
17. “Jeremy”
18. “Songs To Aging Children Come”

Disc Two
Le Hibou Coffee House, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, Recorded by Jimi Hendrix (March 19, 1968)
First Set
1. “Night In The City”
2. “Come To The Sunshine”
3. Intro to “The Pirate Of Penance”
4. “The Pirate Of Penance”
5. “Conversation”
6. “The Way It Is”
7. Intro to “The Dawntreader”
8. “The Dawntreader”
Second Set
9. “Marcie”
10. Intro to “Nathan La Franeer”
11. “Nathan La Franeer”
12. Intro to “Dr. Junk”
13. “Dr. Junk”
14. Intro to “Michael From Mountains”
15. “Michael From Mountains”
16. “Go Tell The Drummer Man”
17. Intro to “I Don’t Know Where I Stand”
18. “I Don’t Know Where I Stand”
19. Intro to “Sisotowbell Lane”
20. “Sisotowbell Lane”
21. Intro to “Ladies Of The Canyon”
22. “Ladies Of The Canyon”
Studio Session, Western Recorders, Hollywood, CA (May 31, 1968)
23. “Come To The Sunshine”
Jane Lurie’s Apartment, Chelsea, Manhattan, New York City, NY (summer 1968)
24. “My Second Album”
25. “Lambert, Hendricks & Ross”
26. “The Pirate Of Penance”
Top Gear BBC Radio Broadcast, London, England (recorded September 23, 1968)
27. Intro to “Chelsea Morning”
28. “Chelsea Morning” – with the John Cameron Group
29. Intro to “The Gallery”
30. “The Gallery”
31. Intro to “Night In The City”
32. “Night In The City” – with the John Cameron Group

Disc Three
Live at Carnegie Hall, New York City, NY (February 1, 1969)
First Set
1. “Chelsea Morning”
2. A Valentine for Joni
3. “Cactus Tree”
4. “Night In The City”
5. “I Had A King”
6. “Blue Boy”
7. My American Skirt
8. “The Fiddle And The Drum”
9. Spoony’s Wonderful Adventure
10. “That Song About The Midway”
11. “Both Sides Now”
Second Set
12. “Marcie”
13. “Nathan La Franeer”
14. Intro to “The Gallery”
15. “The Gallery”
16. “Hunter”
17. “Morning Morgantown”
18. Intro to “Get Together”
19. “Get Together”
20. Intro to “The Circle Game/Little Green”
21. “The Circle Game/Little Green”
Encore
22. “Michael From Mountains”

Disc Four

Live at Carnegie Hall, New York City, NY (February 1, 1969)
1. Intro to “Urge For Going”
2. “Urge For Going”
Clouds Sessions, A&M Studios, Hollywood, CA (spring 1969)
3. “Conversation”
4. “Blue Boy”
5. “The Priest”
Jane Lurie’s Apartment, Chelsea, Manhattan, New York City, NY (mid 1969)
6. “Jesus”
7. Playing piano and vocalizing
The Dick Cavett Show ABC TV Broadcast, New York City, NY (Recorded August 18, 1969)
8. “Chelsea Morning”
9. “Willy”
10. “For Free”
11. Interview
12. “The Fiddle And The Drum”
Ladies Of The Canyon Demo Session, A&M Studios, Hollywood, CA (late 1969)
13. “Woodstock”
Live at Centennial Auditorium, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada (November 1, 1969)
14. “As I Lie Thinking In My Backyard On August 2nd”
15. “Roses Blue”
16. “Rainy Night House”
Ladies Of The Canyon Sessions, A&M Studios, Hollywood, CA (late 1969)
17. “Ladies Of The Canyon” – with cellos
18. “Blue Boy” – with recorder coda
In Concert BBC TV Broadcast, (recorded September 3, 1970)
19. “All I Want”
Blue Demo Sessions, A&M Studios, Hollywood, CA (September 1970)
20. “A Case Of You”
21. “California”

Disc Five
In Concert BBC Radio Broadcast, Paris Theatre, London England (recorded October 29, 1970)
1. Introduction
2. “That Song About The Midway”
3. Intro to “The Gallery”
4. “The Gallery”
5. “Hunter”
6. Intro to “River”
7. “River”
8. “My Old Man”
9. “The Priest”
10. This is a mountain dulcimer
11. “Carey”
12. “A Case Of You” – with James Taylor
13. Intro to “California” – with James Taylor
14. “California” – with James Taylor
15. Intro to “For Free” – with James Taylor
16. “For Free” – with James Taylor
17. Intro to “The Circle Game” – with James Taylor
18. “The Circle Game” – with James Taylor
19. Intro to “You Can Close Your Eyes” – with James Taylor
20. “You Can Close Your Eyes” – with James Taylor
21. “Both Sides Now”
22. Intro to “Big Yellow Taxi”
23. “Big Yellow Taxi”
Blue Sessions, A&M Studios, Hollywood, CA (late 1970/early 1971)
24. “Hunter”
25. “River” – with French horns
26. “Urge For Going” – with strings

Snubbed by the Oscars in 2015, Ava Duvernay’s Magnificent “Selma” is On CBS Tonight

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When I saw “Selma” at its first screening in November 2014, I thought this will win all the Oscars. And this was before the John Legend-Common song, “Glory,” was added to it.

As it turned out, “Selma” was totally snubbed. It got a Best Picture nod, and one for the song, and nothing else. Nothing for director Ava Duvernay, or the actors, especially David Oyelowo as Martin Luther King. Or cinematographer Bradford Young, who is Black.

There was even a star studded premiere. But the studio, Paramount, panicked when criticism came out of nowhere saying Duvernay had purposely made President Lyndon B. Johnson look bad in the movie. It was a ridiculous claim, but it snowballed fast. Whichever Oscar publicist came up with this was no doubt proud of themselves. The Oscar race turned to “Birdman” vs. “Boyhood,” good movies that were not nearly as important or well crafted.

The plot twist: “Glory” won Best Song. That was small consolation. Duvernay and Oyelow and Young were all robbed. But the Academy had yet to diversify. If “Selma” were released now, it might be a different story.

So please watch “Selma” Tonight and see what would have been– just seven years ago. A great movie.

Overview: “Truman & Tennessee” Explores the Two Most Famous Creative Eccentrics of Their Wild Time

Literary titans Truman Capote and Tennessee Williams, both Southerners and gay, travelled in the same artistic circles. Friends with Paul and Jane Bowles, Donald Windham, and Gore Vidal, they were also friends/rivals; each called the other “genius.”

The documentary Truman & Tennessee: An Intimate Conversation puts them in dialogue using evocative archival footage. The strategy works well for filmmaker Lisa Immordino Vreeland’s examination their lives and art, using the voices of the actors Jim Parsons and Zachary Quinto as needed for readings from letters, journals, and key texts. They make talk show appearances, on Dick Cavett and David Frost. Tennessee reveals that in Streetcar Named Desire, both frail Blanche and brute Stanley are parts of him. Truman says writing In Cold Blood nearly killed him. Clips from the movie versions entertain, yes, and show how vital these figures are to American culture.

Having already documented Diana Vreeland, Peggy Guggenheim, and Cecil Beaton in feature length films, the filmmaker may have been most challenged by moving Truman & Tennessee: An Intimate Conversation through the film festival circuit during this pandemic year. At long last, it opens in theaters this week. As the film screened at the Hamptons International Film Festival, I spoke to Lisa Immordano Vreeland about this film about both writers rather than making a biopic about each one.

Lisa Immordino Vreeland: “I intended on doing only Truman. We had already seen so much about his crash, I wanted to do his art. Someone suggested adding Tennessee to the mix. I knew his work as a theatergoer, so I had to catch up on the research, which was great to do. I love going through archives; that’s a big chunk of my work. We created this conversation between the two; it was clear how much they overlapped in the creative process.

“Tennessee was older; there was much we could say in an unconventional manner, to create a story in a nonlinear manner. I wanted to talk about the inner lives of these writers, their mad desire to write and create, and frustration surrounding that. A biopic was not at all the intention. I wanted their voices and beautiful images to convey the feeling of what they were saying. This gave us so much freedom narratively and visually.

Tennessee did not attend Truman’s Black & White Ball in 1966—some call it the party of the century. You don’t dwell on it. Why?

“I wanted to show Truman as a writer. The ball had been talked about in so many ways—I wanted to show the gravitas, the inside of these men—the black and white ball was a party in the end. The writing of In Cold Blood was really part of his downfall, the process of waiting, the decline, so we touched upon the party in a light way, showing his frivolous fun side.

Would you have wanted to go?

“Probably. It was a party! It was such a coveted guest list, can you imagine? It was like when Mrs. Vreeland was doing the party of the year at the Met Costume Institute, –that has now become such a celebrity party; the most sophisticated people in the world were at that party. People were calling, negotiating with him, to be invited. My favorite is the Penelope Tree story—she’s a friend—and she had gotten a Betsey Johnson dress and she cut these holes in it, she wore a long black dress with triangles cut out from the waist over black leggings—she looked absolutely amazing and Cecil Beaton asked her to dance! The only young girl there and Cecil Beaton asked her to dance! And that opened up the door for her. People asked, who is this girl? She looks so different. This was before she was modeling! Beaton and Avedon made her a supermodel. I would I have loved to be Penelope Tree? Yes.

What are you working on now?

Gertrude Stein has interested me for years. She straddled art and literature. It’s time to go back to a woman’s story. I am happy to be at the stage when I am delving into my books again. We don’t have a lot of footage so it will be a challenge.

I am in awe that you are brave enough to tackle subjects who are not alive. You have no central interview.

The positive side to that coin is you don’t have to respond to them. You have to get rights from estates. You are dealing with these characters and the legacy anyway. I feel lucky to be able to make these films.