Wow, I literally saw this guy get diced by lasers in the first Resident Evil just last night (and Jimmy Cliff played Fallon an hour after I put in one of his cds for the first time in months. Eerie)!
Wow, I literally saw this guy get diced by lasers in the first Resident Evil just last night (and Jimmy Cliff played Fallon an hour after I put in one of his cds for the first time in months. Eerie)!
Hall and Oates "Private Eyes" beat it out. A nice song, but sort of B-side fluff compared to those "Good morning" Keef chords…
I think it's largely based on the refurbished outtakes on the second disk, which indeed are great and A-worthy
No, "Infatuation" is far, far better…NO, NO, that cover he did off "Twistin' The Night Away" in Innerspace….
Taylor filling in every second with overrated scale masturbation, sounding disconnected from the rest of the band. Snore.
It's called country humor. You want one-note cock rock you listen to Zep, Aerosmith, AC/DC, etc….
"Cherry Oh Baby" has charm ("Irie!!")
They would've, but it's rock anthem aura just wouldn't have fit the disco/punk leanings of the rest.
Nah, the Zydeco version is too Vegas lounge act. Can't touch Mick's yearning over those intertwining Keith/Ronnie lines.
The distance from "Every Picture Tells A Story" to pomerian-haired Rod crawling on his knees to "Tonight's the Night" is pretty staggering.
Shouldn't the title of this article be something addressed to the staff in the AV office instead of the world at large? We all pretty much knew this.
Of course Hyden's not exactly right about the trend-hopping. Jagger and the band was already pioneering the glammed-out make-up thing in the '68 Jumpin' Jack Flash video when Bowie was still putzing around in art school.
This one was really on the money. Mick's voice is back in peak stylistic form after the unfortunate Superheavy outing and I replay the B-disk quite a bit
(didn't include some other great outtakes from the '77 sessions like the West Indian "Not The Way To Go" and the St. Elsewhere-ish "I Need You," but that's life).
His career's gone downhill since Lost In Space.
Right before San Fran became a colony for yuppie commuters from Palo Alto.
Also very hard to get a tour boat there if you don't book at least a couple weeks in advance (though the ferry to Sausilito gets within fifty yards).
His shattered expression was well done. Think he played Gov. Lew Wallace in Young Guns 2, but haven't seen him in anything else.
I saw him on Broadway in Arthur Miller's "The Price" and in an L & O, arrogantly tossing off baseball anecdotes while beating Waterston in court. Guy's fascinating when given some space.
Powerful stuff (and nice sweeping shot as Rick and old guy are corraling the zombies in the foreground while Shane and the others race toward them in the distance).
If Poehler were half as funny as she thinks she is, she'd be truly monumental in comedy.