Music by Dick Connette from his album, Too Sad for the Public Vol. 1: Oysters Ice Cream Lemonade. Suzzy Roche sings the vocal. Dick’s lyrics were inspired by the reknowned photography book, Wisconsin Death Trip.
An animated cartoon about the Creation myth reviewed and corrected by two women. God the magician ha...

A film in which the one 60-story skyscraper that soars in the spaces between roofs spins with incred...

An anthology of one-minute films created by 51 international filmmakers on the theme of the death of...

SEELE orders an all-out attack on NERV, aiming to destroy the Evas before Gendo can advance his own ...

Creeping from the halls of the maze brain, corruption and terror is woven by devils born from the de...

Halloween, New York City, 1981 Live at The Palladium with Ray White, Steve Vai, Bobby Martin, Tommy ...

Idiosyncratic composer, unique musician and ground-breaking film director ..Frank Zappa packed more ...

Sex as dance and comedy: in Progressive Touch Portnoy studies and expands the relationship between s...

In the feature documentary, Summer 82 – When Zappa Came to Sicily, filmmaker and Zappa fan Salvo Cuc...

Dislocation in time, time signatures, time as a philosophical concept, and slavery to time are some ...

Adopting mainly hand contact printing with photographic enlarger, «Metaphysics of sound» started fro...

Rock musical adaptation of William Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream".

In a nightmarish world, dominated by the decline and degradation of Man , Christ resurrected wanderi...

One morning, the late Karlheinz Stockhausen awoke from a dream that told him to take to the sky. Sto...

Cinematic magician, legendary provocateur, and author of Hollywood Babylon, Kenneth Anger was a uniq...

Frank Zappa and his band in a digitally recorded live performance at "The Pier" in New York, NY on A...

Saw and imagined in the children's fantasy the story of grandmother of Christ and the Apostles a lit...

Initially commissioned to accompany a Danish production of Alban Berg’s LULU, Lewis Klahr’s cut-out ...

"Time, forward!" - two orchestral suites by George Sviridov, published for the first time in 1968 (f...