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Fuse Commentary: WGBH’s Radio Theater of the Absurd

June 22, 2012
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WGBH is exploring an interesting question — how little can you invest in arts coverage and still have the chutzpah to ask for money from supporters who mistake crumbs for a loaf?

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Music Commentary: Radio Silence for Boston Jazz?

June 20, 2012
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Updated.As many Boston listeners feared, WGBH has put its jazz programming on the road to extinction. What is to be done?

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Classical CD Review: Shostakovich, Prologue to “Orango” and Symphony no. 4/Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra

June 20, 2012
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Orango is one of the tantalizing “what might have been’s” of musical history: a biting social commentary on Soviet society on the fifteenth anniversary of the October Revolution, written when Shostakovich was at the height of his musical powers and popularity.

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Music Feature: M2 — “At Land’s Edge” Album Review/Interview

June 19, 2012
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At Land’s Edge is a creepy and wonderful piece of art that will more than likely inspire a mind-altering live experience.

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Jazz CD Review: Transcendence – Ryan Truesdell’s Gil Evans Project

June 18, 2012
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If you’re a Gil Evans devotee, or even a casual appreciator, have I got good news for you: Ryan Truesdell’s Centennial, more than 70 minutes of Evans that we never thought we’d hear, 10 tunes realized so beautifully and brilliantly that they should win a Grammy for Truesdell and a second, posthumous Grammy for Evans.

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Arts Commentary: Critical Rule #1 — Don’t Write Like a Publicist

June 17, 2012
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Early on I was given these words of wisdom by my friend, the late theater critic Arthur Friedman: “Criticism should not read as if it had been written by a publicist.

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Book Review: “Second Person Singular”—A Powerful Look at Israel’s Tangled Issues of Identity

June 17, 2012
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In his novel, Sayed Kashua paints such a vivid picture of modern Jerusalem that I found myself longing to see that city again; he also portrays a whole spectrum of Arab life in Israel — from the poor families visited by the social workers to the ambitious Arab mothers and their sometimes feckless sons — with empathy and humor.

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Fuse Concert Review: A Dazzling Performance From A Far Cry

June 16, 2012
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What continually impresses about A Far Cry is their discipline, ability to keep complicated rubato under complete control, well-modulated dynamics, beauty of sound, and really interesting programming.

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Theater Review: A Spectacular Showbiz “Totem” from Cirque du Soleil

June 15, 2012
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Director Robert Lepage’s spectacular projections, aided by a savvy use of sound effects and lighting, move the dramatic focus of Cirque du Soleil’s Totem with ease, opening up the imaginative boundaries of the stage.

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Poetry Review: Expanding the Power of Verse — The FSG Book of Twentieth-Century Latin American Poetry

June 15, 2012
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One feels when reading this anthology of Latin American poetry that editor Ilan Stavans tucks each poet he features into a folder, but that this categorization, while limiting, also encourages an English-speaking readership to appreciate the eye-opening diversity of Latin American poetry.

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