Sentences with phrase «murder ballad»

Category: MUSIC, PERFORMANCE, THEATER · Tags: Center for the Art of Performance at UCLA (CAP UCLA), Jelly Roll Morton, MICA Maryland Institute College of Art, Murder Ballad 1938 (Poor Dog Group), Poor Dog Group
But of course, it has to be the right music; a doomy murder ballad by Nick Cave, however brilliant, is unlikely to do the trick.
Some of these take the form of in - car conversations, Cave prowling the streets in his retro Jag with the likes of Ray Winstone (who starred in the Cave - scripted western The Proposition) and Kylie Minogue (with whom he recorded the murder ballad Where the Wild Roses Grow), the windscreen providing a mobile proscenium arch.
Nick Cave, the dark master of the murder ballad and baddest of the Bad Seeds, opens up about love and death, heaven and hell, and the ins and outs of his creative process in Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard's hypnotic quasi-documentary.
Others include Blixa Bargeld, a former guitarist with his band the Bad Seeds, and the Australian pop star Kylie Minogue, with whom he had his only major hit, «Where the Wild Roses Grow,» from his «Murder Ballads» album in the mid -»90s.
The editors have carefully chosen something to appeal to everyone: anonymous murder ballads dating back centuries; the immaculately crafted first person monologues of Victorian poets Robert Browning and Thomas Hardy; Tony Barnstone's contemporary sonnets dedicated to pulp fiction themes; and Philip B. Williams's incendiary tale of a cross-dressing young man who guns down his parents.

Not exact matches

The Ballad of Lefty Brown (R for profanity and violence) Bill Pullman assumes the title role in this Western, set on the plains of Montana, about an aging cowboy who enlists the assistance of a young gunslinger (Diego Josef) and a lawman (Tommy Flanagan) to track down the outlaws responsible for the gruesome murder of his friend, a newly - elected U.S. Senator (Peter Fonda).
June 20 - August 2, 2008 Rob Matthews» haunting narrative drawings are based loosely on actual murders in Knoxville, Tennessee and on the Appalachian ballad, «Knoxville Girl.»
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