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Music Documentary Reviews: “Goddess of Slide” and “Sound of the Surf”

July 8, 2025
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For fans of guitar music, two excellent new documentaries offer plenty of insight into impressive musical accomplishments as well as some memorable playing.

Documentary Film Review: “The Atomic Bowl” — The Catastrophic Game Is Still On

July 8, 2025
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The at times chilling narrative of “The Atomic Bowl” raises probing and vexing questions about why we continue to face the threat of nuclear peril today.

Film Review: “Ghost Trail” — Alienated Espionage

July 8, 2025
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Instead of living the life of James Bond, the spy hero of “Ghost Trail” copes with PTSD, the result of living in exile and surviving torture.

Poetry Review: Words into Truth — Henri Cole’s “The Other Love”

July 8, 2025
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There are reassuring lyrics here that suggest that, no matter what terror comes along, our noble charge is to fight to the end, joyously.

Concert Review: Boston Symphony Orchestra plays Rachmaninoff

July 7, 2025
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Pianist Daniil Trifonov’s no stranger to playing Rachmaninoff with Nelsons and the BSO—they delivered a memorable outing of this very piano concerto in 2019—and, while Saturday’s traversal was periodically rusty, it built in spirit and tightness as the evening proceeded.

Classical Album Reviews: “hommages” & Tchaikovsky Orchestral Works, vol. 3

July 7, 2025
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On “hommages,” United Strings of Europe is technically secure, rhythmically precise, richly colored, and ever attuned to matters of nuance and spirit. Tchaikovsky’s output could be uneven, and this installment of  Alpesh Chauhan’s continuing traversal of the Russian icon’s orchestral music with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra is proof.

Classical Album Review: A Glorious Offering of Unrecorded and Other Rarely Performed Bizet Works

July 7, 2025
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The new “Portrait” package contains five hours of music by Bizet that is mostly unknown to music lovers and music lovers. Plus one of his best operas, a one-act written just before “Carmen”: 1872’s “Djamileh,” which is set in a harem.

Coming Attractions: July 6 Through 21 — What Will Light Your Fire

July 6, 2025
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Our expert critics supply a guide to film, visual art, theater, author readings, television, and music. More offerings will be added as they come in.

Film Review: “40 Acres” Tills an Apocalyptic Landscape

July 6, 2025
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This is an auspicious feature debut, a doomsday thriller that touches on resonant topical issues.

Children’s Book Reviews: A Celebration of Science and Scientists

July 6, 2025
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In a time when the work of scientists is itself endangered, these two picture books provide detailed and fascinating insights into how science helps us live in the modern world.

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