Month: November 2015
In Eternity’s Sunrise, Leo Damrosch’s prose flows, filled with imaginative lucidity.
Read MoreBeautifully produced by Seagull Books, The Pilgrim’s Bowl is an invaluable introduction to both painter and poet.
Read MorePeople like [Yigal Amir] emerge in many social movements, people who regard protest within the bounds of democratic process as insufficient.
Read MoreArts Fuse critics select the best in film, theater, dance, music, visual arts, and author events for the coming week.
Read MoreToday, Buddy Guy’s vocals are as fresh and project as strongly as on any of his classic recordings.
Read MoreCinemax’s The Knick is gruesome, grim, and certainly not for the faint of heart.
Read MoreThe history lesson embedded in Bulgarian Rhapsody is subtle yet also packs a wallop.
Read More“They are seekers, like we are, and they connect with the music that we play.”
Read MoreIf you like good, smart singing, tenor Jonas Kaufmann’s Nessun Dorma:The Puccini Album disc is for you.
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