Posts

Arts Reconsideration: The 1971 Project — Celebrating a Great Year in Film (Part One)

March 26, 2021
Posted in , ,

If you like your films “weird, sexually provocative, and intellectually stimulating” (add violence to the mix) then our critics will feed your appetite splendidly.

Read More

Jazz Concert Review: Portrait of Composer/Pianist Ran Blake — Celebrating 85 Years

March 25, 2021
Posted in , , ,

Ran Blake was in fine form at the festivities as were the New England Conservatory faculty and student participants.

Read More

Book Review: “The Death of Vazir-Mukhtar” — A Formalist Critic’s Picaresque Novel

March 25, 2021
Posted in , ,

A new complete translation of the most accomplished novel by Yury Tynyanov, an innovative Russian man of letters during the experimental 1920s.

Read More

Book Review: “The Recent East” — Exploring Seldom Seen Territory

March 25, 2021
Posted in , ,

Thomas Grattan, a New Yorker with German roots, displays an observant eye and a way with dialogue in his first novel.

Read More

Book Review: “¡Printing the Revolution! — The Rise and Impact of Chicano Graphics, 1965 to Now”

March 24, 2021
Posted in , , ,

There’s a looseness, a jagged brio that gives the images in ¡Printing the Revolution! a visual bang — a kind of primal pop.

Read More

Film Review: “The Last Blockbuster” — A Nostalgia Trip to Video Heaven

March 24, 2021
Posted in , ,

Could it be, I dream, that a resurgence in local video shops much be in the cards, like the vinyl record stores that are popping up everywhere now?

Read More

Book Review: “Children Under Fire: An American Crisis” — Gun Violence Run Amuck

March 23, 2021
Posted in , ,

Children Under Fire examines gun violence in America, focusing on how it is threatening our nation’s children.

Read More

Arts Remembrance: Jeff Breeze, Host of WMBR’s “Pipeline”

March 22, 2021
Posted in , ,

“I don’t believe that there has been a stronger advocate for local music than Jeff Breeze. Nobody cared more about local music than him — nobody.”

Read More

Film Review: 1930’s “Ingagi” — An Elusive Beast from the Dark Shadows of American Cinema Emerges

March 22, 2021
Posted in , ,

In its day, Ingagi raked in the crowds with a promise of weird African animals and “wild” women, and a teasing of bestiality.

Read More

Arts Commentary: In Memoriam, James Levine (1943-2021)

March 22, 2021
Posted in , , ,

Do any of his accomplishments – including James Levine’s raising the level of an orchestra’s playing to new heights – really excuse sexual predation?I’d argue in the negative.

Read More

Recent Posts

Popular Posts

Categories

Archives