Difference between revisions of "QMS"

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   Music has long been an important part of the Coen brothers' films; folk songs of an earlier era filled the sound track of "O Brother, Where Art Thou?", their goof on Homer's "Odyssey." This time music is the story's heart and soul, and the trip is as much a pilgrimage as an odyssey by an artist who's unswervingly faithful to his art. Llewyn won't sell out by being frivolous, though he does earn a little money playing guitar in a recording session—the occasion is a cheerfully absurd novelty number by a zero-gravity group called the John Glenn Singers. ("Please Mr. Kennedy, I don't wanna go, please don't shoot me into outer space.") But cartons of his first solo album, which was a flop, have already been remaindered, and his working life can be summed up in a producer's eight-word response to a folk song that he sings with heartbreaking eloquence: "I don't see a lot of money here."
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   Music has long been an important part of the Coen brothers' films; folk songs of an earlier era filled the sound track of "O Brother, Where Art Thou?", their goof on Homer's "Odyssey." This time music is the story's heart and soul, and the trip is as much a pilgrimage as an odyssey by an artist who's unswervingly faithful to his art. Llewyn won't sell out by being frivolous, though he does earn a little money playing guitar in a recording session—the occasion is a cheerfully absurd novelty number by a zero-gravity group called the John Glenn Singers. ("Please Mr. Kennedy, I don't wanna go, please don't shoot me into outer space.") But cartons of his first solo album, which was a flop, have already been remaindered, and his working life can be summed up in a producer's eight-word response to a folk song that he sings with heartbreaking eloquence: "I don't see a lot of money here."

Revision as of 20:17, 27 January 2015

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 Music has long been an important part of the Coen brothers' films; folk songs of an earlier era filled the sound track of "O Brother, Where Art Thou?", their goof on Homer's "Odyssey." This time music is the story's heart and soul, and the trip is as much a pilgrimage as an odyssey by an artist who's unswervingly faithful to his art. Llewyn won't sell out by being frivolous, though he does earn a little money playing guitar in a recording session—the occasion is a cheerfully absurd novelty number by a zero-gravity group called the John Glenn Singers. ("Please Mr. Kennedy, I don't wanna go, please don't shoot me into outer space.") But cartons of his first solo album, which was a flop, have already been remaindered, and his working life can be summed up in a producer's eight-word response to a folk song that he sings with heartbreaking eloquence: "I don't see a lot of money here."
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