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Arts Fuse critics select the best in film, dance, visual art, theater, music, and author events for the coming weeks.
Read MoreFor me, about half of the compositions here successfully reflect the artistic visions of the painters that inspired the music.
Read MoreSatanic Panic is a crazy ride, managing along the way to poke fun at the lifestyles of the rich and bored, reminding us that decadence among the upper classes is very scary indeed.
Read MoreIn a taut 90 minutes, The Lifespan of a Fact zeroes in on some key issues that we’re grappling with as a country — or ought to be.
Read MoreBlue World is valuable for its pellucid recording of takes of tunes Coltrane’s fans already love. They will have to have it.
Read MoreFor anyone interested in the man or that era, De Gaulle is indispensable.
Read MoreHis songs have been recorded by the likes of Bonnie Raitt and Diana Krall. For many, his rank — just short of superstardom — remains a mystery. He’s just too good to be less than a household name.
Read MoreThe Lyric Stage Company of Boston is giving this nostalgic hokum a spirited production.
Read MoreJohnny Hodges was originally a Cambridge/Boston guy, and one of the most interesting sections of Con Chapman biography is his knowledgeable description of the local jazz scene in the 1910’s and ’20s.
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Book Interview: Jay Wexler on the State of “Our Non-Christian Nation”
The book deals with how Atheists, Wiccans, Summums, Muslims, and Satanists “fought to have their voices heard” in communities dominated by Christians and others who were skeptical of their claim that the First Amendment applies equally to all religions.
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