Posts

Book Review: “The Warehouse” — A Visual Primer of America’s Carceral System

June 1, 2024
Posted in , ,

The graphics in “The Warehouse” provide clear explanations of a grim reality. The U.S. leads the world at incarcerating its citizens.

Concert Review: The Rolling Stones — As Precious as Ever

May 31, 2024
Posted in , , ,

Returning to Gillette Stadium in Foxborough on Thursday night, the Rolling Stones, miraculously, sounded dangerous again.

Film Review: “Kidnapped: The Abduction of Edgardo Mortara” — Taken by Order of the Pope

May 31, 2024
Posted in , ,

There is no denying that “Kidnapped”‘s warning about political authority abusing religion for its own accumulative ends resonates powerfully at this moment.

Concert Reviews: Chamber Music Roundup — Radius Ensemble and Chameleon Arts Ensemble

May 30, 2024
Posted in , , ,

Two Boston-area chamber music ensembles recently ended their seasons. Each embraced the present in its own distinctive way.

Theater Review: “4000 Miles” — Are We There Yet?

May 30, 2024
Posted in , ,

The script is representative of the pitfalls of current theatrical minimalism — less can so easily be less.

Author Interview: Talking with Award-Winning Poet and Essayist Maggie Smith

May 30, 2024
Posted in , ,

The inciting action of Smith’s moving memoir is the event that forced her to reckon with the fact that her marriage was in trouble.

Weekly Feature: Poetry at The Arts Fuse

May 30, 2024
Posted in ,

This week’s poem: Kirsten Kaschock’s “Contingent”

Book Review: “Ginster” — The Numbness, not the Glory, of War

May 29, 2024
Posted in , ,

The reissue of this novel now is valuable, beyond its considerable historical and aesthetic virtues, because it makes pertinent points about today’s world, bedeviled by war, misery, poverty, and the enticing lure of despotism as an answer to democracy’s shortcomings.

Music Festival Review: Boston Calling 2024 — A Combustible Parade

May 29, 2024
Posted in , , ,

Boston Calling has evolved into a smorgasbord of everything from indie to mainstream, from pop to hip-hop to hard rock.

Jazz Remembrance: David Sanborn, Way Beyond Smooth

May 28, 2024
Posted in , , ,

He was lucky to be so well-rewarded for doing what he loved to do, and we were always lucky to hear him.

Recent Posts

Popular Posts

Categories

Archives