Search Results: torrent

Dance Review: Smile and Sneer — Mark Morris at the ICA

January 24, 2015
Posted in , ,

Now 58, the noted choreographer’s succinct gestural language, coincident use of music and musical ideas, and spatial elasticity is now completely second nature.

Read More

Jazz Review: Ray Charles Inspires One Hell of a Party at Berklee

September 23, 2012
Posted in , ,

Ray Charles had one of the great voices of the 20th century, and even the best singers have very large shoes to fill when paying tribute.

Read More

Film Feature: Local Rocker Robin Lane and Coming Back Strong “When Things Go Wrong”

March 23, 2014
Posted in , ,

Robin Lane’s story goes back to her ‘60s days as a child of Hollywood glamor, her long tenure as a Boston rock survivor, and her recent renaissance as a musical counsellor for abused women.

Read More

Fuse Commentary: MBTA Set to Demolish the “Center of the Universe” in Harvard Square

August 29, 2013
Posted in , ,

Apparently, an agency like the MBTA can simply take a wrecking ball to pieces of public art such as “Omphalos” when their existence becomes an encumbrance. No questions asked.

Read More

Visual Arts: HarborArts “OccupyING the Present” Brings Boston Harbor to Life

August 19, 2013
Posted in , ,

The Boston Harbor Shipyard is a nifty setting for public art, redolent of old-school fisherman and maritime work. Its fading grandeur of weatherbeaten brick buildings, crumbling facades and stern signage sometimes rivaled the formal artwork.

Read More

Jazz CD Review: A Song Cycle “For Langston”

February 1, 2013
Posted in ,

For Langston fails on its own terms, which is to produce a moving, insightful, and in some sense accurate interpretation of the poetry of Langston Hughes.

Read More

Coming Attractions at Museums: February 2010

February 5, 2010
Posted in ,

By Peter Walsh Luis Meléndez: Master of the Spanish Still Life, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA through May 9. Locked into a low-status, unprofitable niche, talented Spanish still-life painter Luis Meléndez (1716–1780) made little money and achieved even less fame during his lifetime. He is said to have complained to the king, who never…

Read More

Stage Remembrance: Saluting Paul Scofield — A Titanic Figure in the History of the Theater

March 25, 2008
Posted in ,

By Caldwell Titcomb If you ask the British public who the foremost actors of the 20th century were, you will likely get the names of Sir John Gielgud, Sir Ralph Richardson, Sir Laurence Olivier (later Lord Olivier), and Sir Alec Guinness. You are not likely to hear the name of Paul Scofield, who died last…

Read More

Book Review: Two Old Men Singing of Wisdom

February 8, 2011
Posted in , ,

These novels by the young, Indian writers Natacha Appanah, who identifies herself as French-Mauritian, and Rana Dasgupta take the form of memoirs of old men who look back on their lives, searching for the truth and the peace that comes with an understanding of the past. The Last Brother by Natacha Appanah. Translated from the…

Read More

Coming Attractions in Theater: November 2010

October 31, 2010
Posted in , ,

Holiday season is kicking in, which means it becomes harder to find theater that doesn’t set out to warm your heart and melt your mind. Though a Santaland Diary or two remains, the vogue for cynical Xmas shows has run its course. Still, all is not lost when you can still find such extraordinary family…

Read More

Recent Posts

Popular Posts

Categories

Archives