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What you’ll think of this book will likely rest on what you make of the writer’s definition of Black digital Art.
Joshua Harmon’s play offers numerous instances of familial turbulence, moments of rhapsodic relief and — to avoid spoilers — revelations of how guilt and hostility fuse to create irreparable fissures in the family dynamic.
Director Hlynur Pálmason’s latest is an ambitious, artful, but half-baked bagatelle.
Along with its slew of images — photos, sketches, and ephemera as well as album covers — WAIL offers what amounts to a compelling oral history of the mid-century explosion, not only of recorded jazz but of graphic design and, by extension, a burgeoning New York cultural scene.
Lauded in histories of Broadway but rarely performed, “Love Life” proves to be an insightful and effective work of social criticism, nearly eight decades after its premiere.
To watch a Frederick Wiseman documentary is to see a subject or topic through the filmmaker’s eyes.
The poems in :World on a String” set an example for us all of how to live, to love, to release, and to remember.
What stands out for this reader is the humor Daniel Poppick mines from the quotidian.
Composer and bandleader Maria Schneider is a storyteller, and that’s the best way to approach her music for the first time. You listen like you read a short story, with your full attention, and your imagination synced with all of your senses.
Classical Music Commentary: Boston’s Lost Opportunity — How the BSO Board Chose Charles Munch over Leonard Bernstein