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...Epic in Twilight" effectively resolves these inner conflicts, strongly and lyrically through the explicitness of dance movement. Reminiscent of surreal landscapes--curvy, wriggling plants and fairy-tale, almost anthrophomorphic animals of prey--the scenes are washed over by pastel lights and costumes running together like dew dripping from blades of grass. The dancers paint a moving tableau, a soft flowing watercolor with occasional sharp lines that cut at the pastel mist recalling the surprise surreal of Rene Magrette's imagery, the playfulness of Paul Klee's animal compositions, and an accent of slithery, lurking evil. The opening scene contrasts...

Author: By Meredith A. Palmer, | Title: Dance--child | 5/11/1972 | See Source »

...Dead's choice of material for the album is disappointing. Anyone who has seen the Dead in the last six months knows that the group has some incredibly good new originals that were not included. The album could not have suffered if a version of "Morning Dew" or another of the Dead's long numbers was released instead of "The Other...

Author: By Roger L. Smith, | Title: The Grateful Dead | 11/18/1971 | See Source »

...Staying Here With You." When Beck went into a slide guitar solo that proved that Mick Taylor still has a lot to learn, the audience threatened to mob the stage. Beck sensed the crowd's enthusiasm and fanned the flames as he went into his classic version of "Morning Dew." As vocalist Bob Tench is no Rod Stewart, the song was lacking something...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Students Need OK On Waterbeds | 11/11/1971 | See Source »

From "Morning Dew" Beck went immediately into "Jeff's Boogie." The audience rose to its feet and stayed there for the rest of the song. Beck was out to prove that he hadn't lost anything, that he was still the king. "Jeff's Boogie," a fairly complex number that demands the cramming of an almost infinite number of notes into the breaks, was an excellent showcase for Beck's speed and musical ideas...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Students Need OK On Waterbeds | 11/11/1971 | See Source »

...blisters above the desolate landscape of Amchitka, the site of this month's scheduled underground nuclear blast. Bomber tails and ruptured fuselages litter the island. An estimated one million fuel drums are scattered on Alaska's north coast. At least 100,000 drums, left by builders of DEW-line radar sites in the 1950s, disfigure the shores of the Beaufort Sea, within the boundaries of the nation's largest wildlife refuge. Some have been only partially emptied by the departing military and are leaking oil, which is toxic to wildlife. Barrel pollution is also responsible...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: The Military as Litterbug | 10/25/1971 | See Source »

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