v i d e o s
The following videos are either live footage of Angela in performance,
or conceptual art videos featuring Angela's original music.
Enjoy!
Seven Bottles of Light
Live from Kulak's Woodshed, Angela Carole Brown and The Global Folk perform Angela's composition.
With guitarist Ken Rosser, bassist Ross Wright, and drummer Lynn "Skins" Coulter.
Video directed by Paul Kulak
The Slow Club
The title track from singer/songwriter Angela Carole Brown's 2004 jazz CD The Slow Club is a moody
jazz anthem about a nightclub in Paris, with a pastiche of Parisian imagery, and featuring pianist
Ed Czach, bassist Jonathan Pintoff, drummer Craig Pilo, and trumpeter Ron King.
Video directed by Craig Pilo
Ticket Home
Singer/songwriter Angela Carole Brown and guitarist Ken Rosser perform live from Kulak's Woodshed,
from their new CD Music for the Weeping Woman.
Video directed by Paul Kulak
Martin and Malcolm
This hero's parade is a photographic tribute to those who have fought for, and championed,
the rights, freedoms, and protection of others. Set to the music of Angela Carole Brown,
and featuring guitarist Ken Rosser, from their new CD Music for the Weeping Woman.
Video directed by Angela Carole Brown
Pavements
This ambient-industrialist meditation on homelessness features the Post-Modern folk group The Global Folk,
from their 2004 CD Resting on the Rock, and a visual panorama of citizens who live on the fringes of society.
Featuring guitarist Ken Rosser, bassist Ross Wright, percussionist Paul Angers, didgeridoo player
Lonnie Johnson, chanters Glenn Carlos & Kellum Lewis, and singer/songwriter Angela Carole Brown.
Video directed by Angela Carole Brown
Wild Orchids
This original requiem mass was composed in tribute to friends of Angela's who died from AIDS.
"For this video, I chose images of stone angels to accompany the piece because, in the words ofplaywright Tony Kushner: 'They commemorate death, yet suggest a world without dying. They're
made of the heaviest things on earth, stone. Yet they're winged; they are engines and instruments
of flight.' And from my own words, they are known as the guardians of our souls. They take up, or
we assign them, residence in the memory of our departed ones. And in that respect, they comfort
us, in that their very existence, whether real or conjured, assures us that our loved ones are never
far."- Angela
Featuring the voices of The Hollywood Master Chorale, in a performance on April 22, 2007,at the Wilshire United Methodist Church, Los Angeles, and conducted by Glenn Carlos.
Video directed by Angela Carole Brown
The Purple Sleep Café ( & Turkish Coffee )
The song Turkish Coffee is an excerpt from Angela Carole Brown's Off-Broadway one-woman show
The Purple Sleep Café, live from New York's 45th Street Theatre, with accompaniment by pianist
Bill Cantos.
Video directed by Don LaFontaine
Why Does Woman Weep
Inspired by Picasso's "The Weeping Women," a series of portraits of women in various states of despair,
singer/songwriter Angela Carole Brown has composed Why Does Woman Weep for her new CD
Music for the Weeping Woman, and for this video has gathered together the works of artists in addition to
Picasso to help her extend the concept to include, as well, women in celebration, yearning, self-examination,
joy, and cleansing, all instigators of that poignant phenomenon, the shedding of tears.
Featuring guitarist Virtuoso Ken Rosser.
Video directed by Angela Carole Brown
An Old Black Man Some Day
Live from Kulak's Woodshed, singer/songwriter Angela Carole Brown and The Global Folk perform
Angela's original from their 2004 CD Resting on the Rock.
Featuring guitarist Ken Rosser, bassist Ross Wright, and drummer Lynn "Skins" Coulter.
Video directed by Paul Kulak
Purple Haze
Live from the John Anson Ford Amphitheatre, this performance and rendition of Jimi Hendrix's immortal Purple Haze
is by Elvis Schoenberg's Orchestre Surreal, from their show Symphony of the Absurd, arranged and
orchestrated by conductor Ross Wright AKA Elvis Schoenberg, and featuring vocalist/actor Angela Carole Brown as
"The Fabulous Miss Thing" . . . and a gorilla.
Video directed by Daniel O'Callaghan
And for an even more nostalgic look, how about some footage from the 80's!
Complete with shoulder pads, big hair, and bling!
It Don't Mean A Thing
Performance on NHK TV's Music Dream Collection, Tokyo,
in 1989, with a 27-piece orchestra.
Satin Doll
Also on NHK TV's Music Dream Collection, 1989.
My Favorite Things
Live from the 1987 Christmas Special at the legendary Studio One Backlot,
with an arrangement by Angela.
Produced and directed by Don LaFontaine
Pirate Jenny
Live from the legendary Rose Tattoo, in 1986, this performance features Angela
singing the Kurt Weill classic.
The Trolley Song
On a dare!
Also live from the Rose Tattoo, 1986.
Someday We'll All Be Free
Live from the Phillip's Annual Pro-Celebrity Charity Classic,
Bentonville, Arkansas, in 1989, with Angela performing the Donny Hathaway song
with the Jim Vukovich Band.