“Life is Beautiful” With Matthew Ryan

Matthew Ryan plays piano for the affecting songs of hope and sorrow on “Life is Beautiful.”

Life is Beautiful Ryan

Through recent troubled times, Matthew Ryan has maintained a special connection with fans by consistently releasing wonderful timely (and timeless) new music. In just the last two years he has released several EP’s of vital heartfelt music to comfort us in difficult times. Most recently, Ryan put down his electric and acoustic guitars to sit at the piano for the five tracks on the EP Life is Beautiful.

Ryan had never fully composed songs on the piano before, but the songs show his diligence and talent, as he spent his summer developing his connection to the instrument. And in October, with some help from friends, he put together the intimate recordings.

Ryan explains about the new EP on Bandcamp: “It’s been such a hard year. This for me was like finding switches that lit certain constellations at night. I can’t know how you’ll receive them. I can only hope that these songs and their wide minimalism offer to you some version of what they gave to me: A place for my anger, hope and sorrow, and an embattled but resilient faith in each other.”

Life is Beautiful features three new songs, along with instrumental versions of two of them. The songs are: “Don’t Say Goodbye Yet,” “Untitled Verses for Distance,” and “Tyrone.” The latter two songs also appear as instrumentals. The tracks are available on Ryan’s Bandcamp page for download.

Below is “Tyrone.” Ryan describes it as “a story song describing the power of music.” You may find the rhythmic sound of the piano seeping into your soul as the lyrics and Ryan’s voice take you to another place.

Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    The Lost Jerry Lewis Movie: “The Day the Clown Cried”

    Jerry Lewis Concentration Camp

    One of the most famous movies-that-you-cannot-watch is The Day the Clown Cried, a 1972 movie that Jerry Lewis co-wrote, directed, and starred in. The controversial film about an imprisoned circus clown at a World War II concentration camp has achieved legendary status both for being an obviously bad idea and for being shelved by Lewis. But a new BBC documentary The Story of The Day the Clown Cried provides some never-before-seen images from the lost movie about the fictional clown Helmut Doork along with some insight into why Lewis did not want anyone to see the movie.

    If you just think about how a movie about a clown at a concentration camp possibly could go wrong, you may not need to know much more about The Day the Clown Cried. But for everyone curious about how a film got made that ends with Lewis’s clown leading children into the gas chamber at Auschwitz, the BBC documentary, presented by Jewish comedian David Schneider, is revealing.

    To make the 28-minute documentary, Schneider used footage of Jerry Lewis discussing the film and also sought out other people connected to the making of the movie. Check out the complete The Story of The Day the Clown Cried below.

    In 2015, Lewis donated The Day the Clown Cried to the Library of Congress with an agreement that the movie will not be shown for at least ten years. So, if you are curious, you may get to see the movie in 2025 (although the movie itself was never completely finished due to financial and production problems).

    Until then, you will have to satisfy your urge to see a comedian in a Holocaust movie by watching Roberto Benigni in Life is Beautiful (1997).

    What was Jerry Lewis thinking? Leave your two cents in the comments. Photo via YouTube.

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