Rita Coolidge Breaks Out

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Cameron talks with singer Rita Coolidge about her career and marriage to musician/actor Kris Kristofferson in this Rolling Stone interview from June, 1977. The album mentioned in this interview (Anytime…Anywhere) was a break out smash for Coolidge. Coolidge and Kristofferson were one of the big power couples of the ’70s. Coolidge and Kristofferson released one final duet album, Natural Act, in 1979, but their marriage was on the rocks, and they separated by the end of the year.

Coolidge never repeated the pop success of Anytime…Anywhere, but she did continue to land hits on the adult contemporary charts through the early ’80s.

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Proof Returns

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Here’s the latest in our series of Crowe inspired essays called “We Have the Records, We Have the Proof”. The latest entry (by Dan Pulliam) is entitled The Penny Lane Identity Crisis. Another powerful, personal story. Check it out!

The Penny Lane Identity Crisis

(or: how I learned to become an invisible man in just six years)

by Dan Pulliam

Penny Lane is, in some ways, that same person for each of us that she was for William Miller. It took a while for this to dawn on me, but upon subsequent viewing of ‘Almost Famous’ (and, more especially, of ‘Untitled’), a few things became undeniably clear. One: Penny’s perfection is in her flaws. Two: Penny isn’t perfect…she just happens to be perfect for the one who loves her. Three: Under it all, she carries her battered heart wrapped up in a blanket while projecting an air of invincibility. And four: Through everything, there is one person who knows her best…possibly better than she knows herself.

That’s where we come in. And come on, guys, you know who you are. We’re the tortured souls. The ones who find something of worth in a Crowe film because we can actually feel what other people just watch casually with less-than-discerning eyes. We’re the best guys that everyone knows. We’re the last in a dying breed of chivalrous romantics (the ones as yet unphased by the recent influx of societal cynicism). We’re the people who sit patiently and wait for something intangible. We’re never happy until we find it, and yet we’re never quite sure what it is. If this is making any kind of sense to you, then we’re probably on the same page, and in the vein of the tortured soul syndrome, we’ve all got our Penny Lane, don’t we?

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Early Mac

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Cameron profiled the band for Rolling Stone back in 1974. This was before Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham joined the band. On a related note, don’t miss the very famous Mac profile that Crowe did three years later

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Gathering Proof

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Here’s the latest in our series of Crowe inspired essays called “We Have the Records, We Have the Proof”. This one comes courtesy of site reader Lisa King. She recalls her experiences with Crowe’s film and how they shaped her personal life in her piece entitled “The Beauty of Gray”. It’s heartfelt and worth your time. Check it out.

The Beauty of Gray

“Every passing moment is a chance to turn it all around”

by Lisa King

My introduction to the films of Cameron Crowe was a shaky one.

When I first watched ‘Say Anything…‘, I was frustrated with Lloyd for taking Diane back as easily as he did in the scene at the dojo.  I remember thinking that if only the filmmaker had made Diane look into Lloyd’s eyes and really sell the idea that she needed him, not just someone, that I would have felt more satisfied with the movie.

When I first watched ‘Jerry Maguire’, I was exasperated by the ending and felt like I was the only person in the theater who didn’t believe it was an entirely happy one.  I remember thinking that if only the filmmaker had made Jerry and Dorothy hold each others hands at the end, instead of continuing to have Ray be the (literal and symbolic) bridge between them, that I would have felt more satisfied with the movie.

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10″ Series – Low is Next

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Vinyl Films Records second vinyl release (after Mark Kozeleck’s Duk Koo Kim which sold out in the U.S. – Blue Vinyl copies will be available overseas soon) will be released in mid-September. It’s by the Duluth, Minnesota band Low. The EP Murderer will contain three exclusive tracks (“Murderer”, “Silver Rider” & “From Your Place on Sunset”). It will be released on 10″ vinyl only, 1,000 numbered copies in the states (black vinyl) and 500 copies on red vinyl in Europe. Stay tuned for all the latest.

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Russell Crowe Rocks

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Cameron comments on Russell Crowe’s band Thirty Odd Foot of Grunts and their 2001 album Bastard Life or Clarity. You may also want to check out the band’s official site.

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Crowe’s Shortlist

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The Shortlist was formed in the Summer of 2001 to honor the most adventurous and creative albums of the year across all genres of music, focusing on emerging artists rather than established hitmakers (it must have sold fewer than 500,000 copies). Previous winners include Sigur Rós in 2001 and N.E.R.D in 2002. A panel (including Cameron) have selected 86 nominees for this year’s award. Other “listmakers”, which also include filmmaker Spike Jonze, musicians Dave Matthews, Tori Amos, Chris Martin, Mos Def, Gwen Stefani, Tom Waits, Eryka Badu, journalists Josh Tyrangiel (Time) and Kim Osorio (The Source) and radio personality Nic Harcourt (KCRW-FM). The panel will whittle the list down to ten albums by the first week of September. The winning album will then be announced on October 16th at the Shortlist Music Prize award show at the Wiltern Theater in Los Angeles.

Here’s the ten albums that Cameron picked. This is his first year participating.

  • Eels – Shootenanny
  • Bright Eyes – Lifted
  • Mogwai – Happy Songs for Happy People
  • Damien Rice – O
  • Mark Olson & The Creekdippers – Decembers Child
  • Burnside Project – Networks Circuits Streams Harmonies
  • Chip Taylor + Carrie Rodriguez – Lets Leave This Town
  • Interpol – Turn Off the Bright Lights
  • Kathleen Edwards – Failer
  • Neko Case – Blacklisted
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More Proof

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Here’s the second entry of Cameron Crowe inspired literature from site reader Natalie Plummer, an NYU journalism major. She touches on each of his films as Crowe is a real life inspiration for Natalie, who strives to follow in his writing footsteps.

Cameron Crowe: You Are Now Connected by Natalie Plummer

Cameron Crowe is a director who thoughtfully and masterfully links with the human heart.  He creates images that are like old photographs; they stir up memories of beautiful moments when things feel just right in our lives.  He touches the soul with music: classic rock, acoustic melodies, and broken hearted love songs.  Crowe skillfully uses music to highlight the beauty of a sometimes soundless world.  Life in a Cameron Crowe film feels real, but not quite.  And we’re not just talking about an “open your eyes” lucid dream.  Crowe shows us an idea of life we want, one which we are inspired to attain.  Words with meaning, songs with passion, honesty—this is the basis of the human spirit and it is what we seek in each moment of the day.  How often do you wish you had complete sincerity, the readiness to get your heart broken, your dreams crushed, take the ultimate step?  Crowe’s films mirror times and experiences in our own lives, but they also encapsulate our feelings during brief but magnificent moments.

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  • Almost Famous- Paramount+, AMC+
  • David Crosby: Remember My Name- Starz
  • Elizabethtown- FUBO
  • Say Anything...- Disney+, Hulu, AMC+
  • Vanilla Sky- Paramount+,Showtime
  • We Bought A Zoo- Disney+, Roku