Music : Tempest |
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Rating: - * Excellent ... I've been buying and listening to Jesse Cook's music for a few years now after reading some of the reviews and now have every CD and DVD he's released and plays like the worlds best Flamenco guitarists ... Excellent . Rating: - * Fantastico ... Jess Cooke Tempest is fantastic. Highly recommend for everyone. His other albums are just as good if not better. Rating: - * Outstanding guitar music. ... I am a guitar music lover, and basically Rumba-Flamenco is my favorit music, so I actually enjoy the whole CD content. Rating: - * Soft, tender and rewarding. ... A little less deliberate than you can often find with other spanish guitarists, this is album is a pleasure for those wanting to experience outstanding spanish guitar. Soft, tender and rewarding. Rating: - * Jesse Cook-\"Tempest\" ... This is one super-talented young artist! Jesse Cook has an unusual style, combining Spanish Flamenco with Middle Eastern. The band must keep a fire extinguisher close by Mr. Cook as he flashes up and down the fretboard, tracing fire on the strings of his guitar. I like to listen to Jesse Cook as I work in my pottery studio. The energy passes from the recording of Jesse's hands on the guitar, to my hands on the clay. I have bought all the currently avauilable albums Jesse has published. |

Critics and audiences didn't seem too happy with Back to the Future, Part II, the inventive, perhaps too clever sequel. Director Zemeckis and cast bent over backwards to add layers of time-travel complication, and while it surely exercises the brain it isn't necessarily funny in the same way that its predecessor was. It's well worth a visit, though, just to appreciate the imagination that went into it, particularly in a finale that has Marty watching his own actions from the first film. --Tom Keogh
Shot back-to-back with the second chapter in the trilogy, Back to the Future, Part III is less hectic than that film and has the same sweet spirit of the first, albeit in a whole new setting. This time, Marty ends up in the Old West of 1885, trying to prevent the death of mad scientist Christopher Lloyd at the hands of gunman Buford "Mad Dog" Tannen (Thomas F. Wilson, who had a recurring role as the bully Biff). Director Zemeckis successfully blends exciting special effects with the traditions of a Western and comes up with something original and fun. --Tom Keogh


