Critic Judith Crist on "Let It Be"
Film critic Judith Crist reviews the upcoming documentary "Let It Be," which was released in May 1970 after Paul McCartney announced the Beatles were breaking up.
Related Speeches & Audio (10)
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Critic Judith Crist on "Let It Be"
Critic Judith Crist on "Let It Be"Audio Clip (1:23)
Audio Clip (1:23)
Film critic Judith Crist reviews the upcoming documentary "Let It Be," which was released in May 1970 after Paul McCartney announced the Beatles were breaking up.
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Jim Morrison on Songwriting
Jim Morrison on SongwritingAudio Clip (0:55)
Audio Clip (0:55)
In an interview with Village Voice rock journalist Richard Goldstein for PBS's "Critique," which aired May 23, 1969, Doors frontman Jim Morrison describes the influence of live performance on song structure.
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Alan Freed's Last Goodbye
Alan Freed's Last GoodbyeAudio Clip (0:26)
Audio Clip (0:26)
In the wake of a payola scandal, Alan Freed, the disc jockey known as Moondog, bids farewell to his fans on his final broadcast from WABC on November 23, 1959.
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Irving Berlin on Stephen Foster
Irving Berlin on Stephen FosterAudio Clip (0:39)
Audio Clip (0:39)
Twentieth-century composer Irving Berlin discusses songwriter Stephen Foster's contributions to American popular music. Foster's most well-known songs include "Oh! Susanna," "Camptown Races" and "My Old Kentucky Home."
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Paul McCartney on "Paul Is Dead" Rumor
Paul McCartney on "Paul Is Dead" RumorAudio Clip (0:33)
Audio Clip (0:33)
The Beatles' Paul McCartney addresses the rumor that swept through the United States in the late 1960s that he had died and been replaced with a lookalike imposter.
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Bernstein's New York Philharmonic Debut
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Audio Clip (1:32)
On November 14, 1943, an introduction to the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra concert at Carnegie Hall announces that the young American-born assistant conductor, Leonard Bernstein, will be taking the place of Bruno Walter, who fell ill.
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Harold Lloyd on Slapstick Comedy
Harold Lloyd on Slapstick ComedyAudio Clip (0:51)
Audio Clip (0:51)
Harold Lloyd, who along with Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton was one of the Big Three of silent film comedy, compares his early work to current comedy in film.
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Martin Scorcese on Making of "Taxi Driver"
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Audio Clip (1:18)
Acclaimed American film director Martin Scorsese provides the back story to a pivotal scene in his gritty 1976 movie "Taxi Driver."
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Silent Film Director Recalls W.C. Fields
Silent Film Director Recalls W.C. FieldsAudio Clip (1:34)
Audio Clip (1:34)
Mack Sennett, creator of the Keystone Kops, shares his memories of what it was like to know and work with the incomparable comedian W.C. Fields.
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Mack Sennett on His Humble Beginnings
Mack Sennett on His Humble BeginningsAudio Clip (7:40)
Audio Clip (7:40)
Canadian-born director Mack Sennett, the creator of the Keystone Kops, describes how his persistence to become a performer eventually paid off. Sennett got his start in vaudeville and theater.
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Ask Steve: The 60's Music
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The influence of rock and roll music on young people in the 1960's is examined in this Ask Steve video. This rock and roll music grew up simultaneously with the Baby Boomers, and was used as a way to differentiate themselves with their parents.
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Bruce Springsteen and the 60s
Bruce Springsteen and the 60sVideo Clip (3:29)
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Bruce Springsteen tells how music had a lasting change on society in 1968 in his interview with Tom Brokaw.
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Brother, Can You Spare A Dime
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Allison Moorer sings the Great Depression anthem, "Brother, Can You Spare A Dime."
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1950s
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The 1950s were about more than just poodle skirts and rock and roll.
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Multi-Tasking Musicians
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Women of Music
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Get the unexpected stories behind some of the most famous women in the world of popular music.
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1970s
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The 1970s are famous for bell-bottoms and the rise of disco, but it was also an era of economic struggle, cultural change and technological innovation.
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Black Women Musicians
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