It's hard to imagine two more dissimilar pop figures than Elton John, sometimes known to don a Donald Duck costume before pounding his Steinway to bits, and Ray Cooper, that guy often spied hypnotically pumping an egg shaker from behind Invisible Man shades in the stage's deep shadows. But the two shared the spotlight for a historic gig at London's Rainbow Theatre in May of 1977.
Wednesday, July 23, 2025
Monday, July 14, 2025
Review: 'The Godfathers of Horror Films'
I've read biographies of Boris Karloff and Peter Cushing. I've read a book about the professional and personal relationship between Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee. But I've never read a book like Jennifer Selway's The Godfathers of Horror Films.
Selway attempts to do a lot in just two-hundred pages. At its most basic, The Godfathers of Horror Films is a triple-duty biography of Karloff, Cushing, and Lee. While the three stars have several significant things in common—they're all British, they all became stars by making Frankenstein movies after many years of toiling away as bit players, they all had major and prolific careers as horror stars thereafter, they were all the faces of studios intrinsically associated with horror, they all fought in world wars—their careers overlapped infrequently enough to make weaving their stories together a challenge.
Tuesday, July 8, 2025
Review: 'Frankenstein Lives: The Legacy of the World's Most Famous Monster'
Dracula may be sexier, but Frankenstein is the king of the monsters. His power, pathos, versatility, metaphorical possibilities, and iconic looks are all larger than manmade life. The story of his literary creation is much more legendary than that of Dracula's, and the subsequent tales he has inspired more profound. So it's only natural that this unnatural character has been the topic of many books.
Friday, July 4, 2025
Review: 'The Who Album by Album: Listening to You'
A few decades ago, The Who easily floated in the same atmospheric level as The Beatles, the Stones, and Led Zeppelin. They seem to have spent the subsequent years drifting back to Earth despite the tremendous quality of Pete Townshend's songs and the utter power and uniqueness of his, John Entwistle's, and Keith Moon's musicianship. So it's nice that a fan such as Dante DiCarlo still cares enough to devote a book to the albums this top-tier band made.
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