The subtitle of the Apple TV+’s “1971” is the first clue as to the ambitions of the seven-part documentary series. While it is loosely based on David Hepworth’s 2016 book, “Never a Dull Moment: 1971 — ...
Alongside music supervisor Iain Cooke, directors Asif Kapadia and Danielle Peck discuss what it took to capture a vivid, tumultuous year and the music that came from it. When read as a single list, ...
Fifty years ago at this time, the world was just beginning to absorb the impact of Marvin Gaye’s seminal concept album What’s Going On. The LP, released on May 21, 1971, told a story in music from the ...
Was 1971 the best single year for recorded popular music, ever? Or merely the year in which it reached peak cultural significance? Maybe, just maybe, the answer could be: both. You’ll certainly be ...
Discover What’s Streaming On: In the Star Trek episode “The City on the Edge of Forever,” Mr. Spock theorizes that “time is fluid, like a river, with currents, eddies, backwash.” He adds that there ...
Fifty years ago the Vietnam War was raging, the civil rights era had morphed into the Black Power movement, President Nixon declared a war on drugs and not only the U.S. but other countries seemed in ...
"Everything would go wrong, but the music would prevail!" Apple TV+ has unveiled the first official trailer for the exciting, immersive new docu-series called 1971: The Year That Music Changed ...
The year 1971 was a musical powerhouse that gave us some of the most unforgettable songs in American history. It was a time when the cultural revolution of the ’60s was maturing into something deeper ...
WHICH YEAR was pop music’s greatest? The makers of “1971: The Year That Music Changed Everything”, a documentary series now streaming on Apple TV+, have no doubt. The programme is based on “Never a ...
Marco Vito Oddo is a writer, journalist, and amateur game designer. Passionate about superhero comic books, horror films, and indie games, he formally worked as a Senior Writer for Collider. When he's ...
Apple TV+ premieres a pair of docuseries this week, but the one with the splashier marquee, the Oprah Winfrey-Prince Harry-produced mental-health program “The Me You Can’t See,” runs a distant second ...