Month: June 2015

Fuse Book Review: “The Book of Beginnings” — Vive les indifférences!

June 8, 2015
Posted in , , ,

This study is an attempt to “enter” a foreign way of thought and to study the “possibilities” and, by extension, “potential mindsets” of the human mind.

Read More

Fuse Coming Attractions: What Will Light Your Fire This Week

June 7, 2015
Posted in , ,

Arts Fuse critics select the best in film, theater, music, dance, visual arts, and author events for the coming week.

Read More

Film Review: “The Water Diviner” — Starts Out Well But Takes a Dive

June 7, 2015
Posted in , ,

Actor Russell Crowe’s directorial debut is visually gripping and very well acted — but its ending is disappointingly hokey.

Read More

Film Review: “Love & Mercy” – A Compelling Life of Brian

June 6, 2015
Posted in , ,

Paul Dano invests the younger Brian Wilson with focused ecstasy, especially during his creation of the landmark album, Pet Sounds.

Read More

Concert Reviews: The First Wave of Odyssey Opera’s “The British Invasion”

June 4, 2015
Posted in , , , ,

To say that Odyssey Opera continues to set the bar for opera performances in Boston may be a bit superfluous, but it’s true.

Read More

Fuse Rock Review: Wire — Unconventional Pop That Seduces and Confuses

June 4, 2015
Posted in , , ,

The sound was often so inviting that it seemed Wire were easing comfortably into middle age.

Read More

Music Commentary: Jazz and the Piano Concerto — A Coda without a Finale

June 3, 2015
Posted in , , , ,

What we know of mass-market choice suggests that the more choices a person has, the more likely it is that the person will be dissatisfied with any one choice.

Read More

Jazz Review: Bill Frisell’s Americana Dreams

June 3, 2015
Posted in , , ,

Bill Frisell and his quartet performed a program of well-worn American hits whose juxtapositions allowed you to make your own cross-references and draw your own conclusions.

Read More

Book Review: A Classic of Cinematic Fiction — “The Diver’s Clothes Lie Empty”

June 2, 2015
Posted in , ,

What if Alfred Hitchcock had sat out behind his Holmby Hills bungalow, smoking clove cigarettes and writing chick-lit novels?

Read More

Film Review: “Félix and Meira” — Intelligent But Uptight

June 2, 2015
Posted in , ,

In his Boston Globe review, Ty Burr complained Félix and Meira was needlessly slow in the telling. I felt that the movie is needlessly discreet.

Read More

Recent Posts