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Topic: Private Eye (Recordings)


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In the News (Wed 30 Dec 09)

  
 6/6/00: Things to Come
Miraculously, the unpublished records survived over 50 years in storage when they were uncovered by Jonathan Dobson in 1991 among a private collection of recordings donated to the Royal Academy of Music by Sir Henry Wood (who is cherished today as the founding father of the BBC Promenade concerts.
Bliss paid tribute to him as "a master" and wrote in his autobiography "I used to greatly admire Muir at work, baton in one hand, stop-watch in the other, one eye on the film and the other on his players.
"Bliss conducts Bliss", digitally remastered recordings of the Concert Suite from Things to Come (17 June 1957) and excerpts from the 1935 Decca recording by the LSO ('Ballet for Children', 'Melodrama: Pestilence; Attack', 'The World in Ruins') Dutton Laboratories CDLXT 2501 released 1995.
www.filmscoremonthly.com /articles/2000/06_Jun---Things_to_Come.asp   (1753 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Music: Dead Parrot Society: The Best of British Comedy [IMPORT] [COMPILATION]
Those sources are Amnesty International concerts, Private Eye magazine and The Portsmouth Sinfonia.
Plus recordings by The Portsmouth Sinfonia, the self described "World's Worst Orchestra".
The recordings here are only taken from three seperate sources.
www.amazon.ca /exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000032V4   (1753 words)

  
 Arthur Lyman
The group appeared on numerous television variety shows in the 1960s, including "The Red Skelton Show," "The Andy Williams Show," and "The Steve Allen Show." But their best-known TV appearances were their guest spots on "Hawaiian Eye," the Robert Conrad - Connie Stevens private eye show set on Oahu.
Search GEMM for old recordings by Arthur Lyman.
Lyman's style was softer than Denny's, but he went much further in his use of exotic environmental sounds.
www.spaceagepop.com /lyman.htm   (1109 words)

  
 The Pink Floyd Archives Library
Includes chapters on Private Eye, sculpture, gossip column, British Prime Ministers, the political scene, the U.S.A., world politics, and animation and film design.
Features a Soft Machine family tree, concert file, discography, recording sessions, radio, TV, and film recordings, the Softs after Soft Machine, and a list of interesting Soft Machine and related websites.
Synopsis: The official press book for the movie, Zabriskie Point.
rac.neptunepinkfloyd.co.uk /PFbooks/BooksSZ.htm   (2481 words)

  
 Gale Schools - Black History Month - Biographies - Walter Mosley
Awards: Shamus Award, Private Eye Writers of America, and Edgar Award nomination, best new mystery, Mystery Writers of America, both 1990, both for Devil in a Blue Dress; Grammy Award, best album liner notes, for Richard Pryor.
Entertainment Weekly contributor Tom De Haven called the book a "beautiful little masterpiece, and one probably best read while listening, very late at night, to Robert Johnson: The Complete Recordings.
The novel was nominated for an Edgar Award for best first novel by the Mystery Writers of America in 1990.
www.galeschools.com /black_history/bio/mosley_w.htm   (2481 words)

  
 Bing Crosby Biography
The trio made popular recordings and appeared in the 1930 film "The King of Jazz," Crosby made good use of these showings, thus enabling him to try a solo career.
He also teamed up with Frank Sinatra in the film "High Society." Crosby began to slow down in the '60s but it was around this time that his laid back stage persona was said to be his professional side, not his private.
His "Road" pictures with Bob Hope and Dorothy Lamour kept him in the public eye and by the '50s he was involved in films and television, including some lightweight roles that not always featured his singing.
www.timelessmusic.com /Bios/biobingcrosby_328.htm   (432 words)

  
 Where Dead Voices Gather by Nick Tosches PopMatters Book Review
Even though Tosches cynically states, "Meaning is the biggest suckers-racket of all and any regard for it, no matter how fleeting, befits a middle-aged fool like me," he doggedly pursues all the available evidence for the importance of Miller's career with the tenacity of a private eye.
The number of recordings and musicians Tosches brings up either as an influence upon or a consequence of Miller's music is awe-inspiring.
Tosches seems unwilling to grant that the motive for engaging in the practice was anything more complicated than a desire for money on the part of impoverished performers.
www.popmatters.com /books/reviews/w/where-dead-voices-gather.shtml   (432 words)

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