-
Eugene Paul
Sculatti (born
January 30, 1947) is an
American music journalist who
compiled and
edited the book The
Catalog of Cool (1982). In 1966, he became...
-
vocal that
makes the song
stand out,
according to
music journalist Gene
Sculatti, "at ease with its own
intensity [that is]
finally out of Richard's shadow...
- have ever
heard from a
major rock band." In a rare
positive review, Gene
Sculatti of
Phonograph Record praised John Fogerty's
performance on the record,...
- Recorders, Hollywood, California, on
September 11, 1957.
Music journalist Gene
Sculatti describes the
instrumentation provided by the back-up
musicians as "unstoppable...
- ribbon-controlled instruments. In a 1968
editorial for Jazz & Pop, Gene
Sculatti predicted that the song "may yet
prove to be the most
significantly revolutionary...
- a
collective statement."
Writing in Jazz & Pop
magazine in 1968, Gene
Sculatti recognized the album's debt to
Rubber Soul,
saying that Pet
Sounds was...
-
Archived from the
original on
October 28, 2012.
Retrieved March 2, 2015.
Sculatti, Gene (October 1982). The
Catalog of Cool.
Warner Books. ISBNÂ 978-0-446-37515-3...
-
picture sleeves showing the same
album cover photo. Nevertheless, as Gene
Sculatti and
Davin Seay
write in
their book San
Francisco Nights, Moby
Grape "remains...
- a
serious rock
group had
critics and fans divided, as
journalist Gene
Sculatti wrote at the time, "the
California ****tet is
simultaneously hailed as genius...
- music's
cultural legitimisation as an art form.
Writing in 1968, Gene
Sculatti of Jazz & Pop
recognised Rubber Soul as "the
definitive 'rock as art' album"...