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Explore St Louis role in American popular music at Missouri History Museum
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Linda Ronstadt - Get Closer (12 tracks) +Album Reviews
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Rock & Roll Hall of Fame 2021: Here’s who (we think) will be inducted Troy L. Smith, cleveland.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio – The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame will announce its Class of 2021 this month. A diverse ballot and longer-than-usual Fan Vote have made the announcement for this year’s inductees one of the more anticipated in recent memory.
2021 is lining up to be a big year for the museum, as it bounces back from the coronavirus pandemic. And at the center of everything is the Induction Ceremony set for Cleveland’s Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse on Oct. 30.
But who will be honored? Will Tina Turner and Carole King become two-time inductees? Will Jay-Z or LL Cool J add yet another big rap name to the Rock Hall? Can previous nominees like Rage Against the Machine, Chaka Khan, Todd Rundgren, or Kate Bush finally make it in?
Who’s going to tell the makers of
TINA that as its legendary subject recounts a harrowing experience of fleeing her abusive ex-husband by running across a Dallas freeway, the film’s accompanying stock footage shows Downtown Houston – not our little sister town? Or at least that, unlike plenty of Ike Turner’s songs in sound, not all Texas city skylines look the same?
However late it is for Turner’s camp to distinguish Dallas from Houston, HBO’s recent documentary on the 2021 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame nominee is rich in stock footage of country churches, tape recorders, bedrooms, dining room tables, dilapidated country homes, pastures, wallpapered hallways, even landline telephones. If you’ve ever wondered how inanimate objects and uninhabited spaces pair with dated Tina Turner interviews, you’re in for a treat.
Tina Turner performing in 1976, from the documentary “Tina.” (Rhonda Graam/HBO)
We know the Tina Turner story through Turner’s bestselling autobiography, “I, Tina,” and the Angela Bassett-starring “What’s Love Got to Do With It?” from 1993 and the Broadway jukebox musical “Tina – The Tina Turner Musical” and countless print and broadcast profiles, and yet there’s something fresh and timely and inspiring and uplifting about the new documentary titled simply “Tina,” now streaming on HBO and HBO Max.
Oscar-winning directors Daniel Lindsay and T.J. Martin (“The Undefeated”) revisit Tina’s life story, from her humble beginnings to her commercially successful but personally devastating partnership with Ike Turner to her incredible reinvention and rise to global superstar at an age when most rock singers are cruising along on greatest-hits tours. The result is a documentary with more dramatic swings, more triumphs and setbacks, more insanely entertaining
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