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The Vinyl Vault: A look into ‘In The Pocket' by The Commodores
The Vinyl Vault: A look into ‘In The Pocket' by The Commodores

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

The Vinyl Vault: A look into ‘In The Pocket' by The Commodores

Each week in The Vinyl Vault, Ozarks First's Parker Padgett and Tony Nguyen dive into a featured album, highlight standout tracks and explore what makes it truly unique. The vinyl of the week this time is 'In The Pocket' by The Commodores from 1981. This is the final album to feature Lionel Richie before he left the band to start a solo career. The album contained two hit singles, 'Lady (You Bring Me Up) and 'Oh No'. 'Lady (You Bring Me Up)' was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1982. Check out the video above to hear the breakdown of the album. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

The Vinyl Vault: A look into ‘Crying Time' by Ray Charles
The Vinyl Vault: A look into ‘Crying Time' by Ray Charles

Yahoo

time09-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

The Vinyl Vault: A look into ‘Crying Time' by Ray Charles

Each week in The Vinyl Vault, Ozarks First's Parker Padgett and Tony Nguyen dive into a featured album, highlight standout tracks, and explore what makes it truly unique. The vinyl of the week this time is 'Crying Time' by Ray Charles from 1966. Crying Time was the first album released by Charles' own record label, Tangerine. The album managed to reach #15 on the US Billboard Top LPs and #1 on the US Top Selling R&B LPs. Check out the video above to hear the breakdown of the album. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

CAAMFest films show Vietnam War is still in our DNA a half-century later
CAAMFest films show Vietnam War is still in our DNA a half-century later

San Francisco Chronicle​

time09-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

CAAMFest films show Vietnam War is still in our DNA a half-century later

The United States marked the 50th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War last week, and judging by the scarcity of events and subdued mentions in the media, Americans have moved on from one of the most disastrous events in the nation's history. But the anguish on Oakland filmmaker Tony Nguyen's face as he searches for the father he never knew in his documentary 'Year of the Cat' tells a different story. The ripple effects from a conflict that killed 58,000 U.S. troops and 3 million Vietnamese, most of them civilians, are still very much with us, and CAAMFest is helping make sense of it all. More Information CAAMFest 43 What: The nation's longest running Asian American-themed film festival. When: Thursday-Sunday, May 8-11. Where: AMC Kabuki 8, 1881 Post St., S.F.; San Francisco Museum of Art's Phyllis Wattis Theater, 151 Third St., S.F.; Roxie Theater, 3117 16th St., S.F. Opening night: 'Third Act,' Tadashi Nakamura's documentary about his father, Robert A. Nakamura, now in his late 1980s, a legend in Asian American independent film circles. 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Kabuki. Followed by opening night gala at Asian Art Museum, 200 Larkin St., S.F. Centerpiece documentary: Rajee Samarasinghe's 'Your Touch Makes Others Invisible' which examines the number of enforced disappearances in Sri Lanka, most of whom are Tamils. 12:30 p.m. Saturday, SFMOMA. Centerpiece narrative: Vera Brunner-Sung's 'Bitterroot' is set in the Hmong community in Missoula, Mont. 7 p.m. Saturday, Kabuki. Closing night: 'Yellow Face,' Annette Jolles' filmed performance of the Tony Award-nominated Broadway play starring Daniel Dae Kim and Francis Jue, who are both also Tony nominated and are scheduled to appear in person. 8 p.m. Sunday, Kabuki. For tickets, a full schedule and more information: The 43rd edition of the nation's oldest Asian American-themed film festival run by the Center for Asian American Media, which runs from Thursday to Sunday, May 8-11, features a special section devoted to films addressing the legacy of a war that ended with the fall of Saigon on April 30, 1975. 'It's important to hear from those directly impacted by war and the aftermath of war, the refugee experience,' Nguyen, whose 'Year of the Cat' plays at 8:30 p.m. Friday, May 9, at the AMC Kabuki 8, told the Chronicle. 'To be able to hear the stories of what my parents went through, what I went through growing up here, the wounds that carried over to my generation. We're trying to unpack what happened in the past that has made us who we are today and to try to get into a better, healthier place for future generations.' Like most Americans living today, Nguyen was born after the end of the war, but just barely. His mother, unknowingly pregnant, fled to the U.S. after the fall of Saigon and as a refugee was placed in tiny Seymour, Ind., where Nguyen was born in late 1975. Now a father of two, Nguyen felt it was important for his family legacy to attempt to find his father. The quest — aided by DNA tests — took him five years, during which the filmmaker said he underwent an 'inner transformation.' 'I'm really blessed to have people on my mom's side of the family, and my mother, who allowed me to question her about sensitive topics. My family has really demonstrated what love is, what love looks like,' Nguyen said. 'There are good people in the world who I couldn't have done what I did without, whether it was the YouTuber that helped me out or various family members.' 'The Motherload' also features an immigrant mother and her offspring, but takes a far different approach. The narrative film, which screens (noon Sunday at the Kabuki) stars writer and co-director Van Tran Nguyen and her real-life mother, Sang Tran. The mother and daughter attempt to heal the rift between them by reenacting, often hilariously, scenes from classic Vietnam War-themed films such as Francis Ford Coppola's ' Apocalypse Now ' and Oliver Stone's 'Platoon.' The clever movie is preceded by a short documentary, 'We Were the Scenery,' written and produced by poet Cathy Linh Che, about her parents, Vietnamese refugees who fled the war and found themselves in the Philippines performing as extras in 'Apocalypse Now.' Together, the films explore how Hollywood has often misrepresented the conflict and the Vietnamese diaspora. '('Apocalypse Now') has defined much of the American imagination of the Vietnam War, and so I wanted to add my parents voices into that space where they were not able to have a voice,' said Che, whose latest book of poetry 'Becoming Ghost' was published last month. 'As artists we are here to illuminate stories that have been erased and hidden, and as moviegoers we are also here to attune ourselves to these stories so that they can add to the fullness of our (understanding).' Other films at CAAMFest that address the war at least tangentially include a retrospective screening of Ann Hui's 1982 classic 'Boat People' (7 p.m. Friday, Roxie Theater); the first three episodes of 'Our Roots, Our Power' (2:30 p.m. Saturday, Kabuki), a Southeast Asian American Journeys docuseries; 'Cu Li Never Cries' (3 p.m. Saturday, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art's Phyllis Wattis Theater); and 'New Wave' (3 p.m. Sunday, Phyllis Wattis Theater), Elizabeth Ai's documentary about a music movement that helped Vietnamese American teens in the 1980s process the trauma of the refugee experience.

The Vinyl Vault: A look into ‘Make It Big' by Wham!
The Vinyl Vault: A look into ‘Make It Big' by Wham!

Yahoo

time02-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

The Vinyl Vault: A look into ‘Make It Big' by Wham!

Each week in The Vinyl Vault, Ozarks First's Parker Padgett and Tony Nguyen dive into a featured album, highlight standout tracks, and explore what makes it truly unique. The vinyl of the week this time is 'Make It Big' by Wham! from 1984. Make It Big featured four singles, 'Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go', 'Careless Whisper', 'Freedom', and 'Everything She Wants'. The album was a commercial success, hitting number one in both the U.S. and the U.K., and all four singles reached the top three in both countries. Check out the video above to hear the breakdown of the album. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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