• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • About
  • Donate

The Arts Fuse

Boston's Online Arts Magazine: Dance, Film, Literature, Music, Theater, and more

  • Podcasts
  • Coming Attractions
  • Reviews
  • Short Fuses
  • Interviews
  • Commentary
  • The Arts
    • Performing Arts
      • Dance
      • Music
      • Theater
    • Other
      • Books
      • Film
      • Food
      • Television
      • Visual Arts

Music for Food

Music Commentary: The Inspiration of “Music for Food”

The pairing of food for the stomach and food for the soul made me think of the role of culture in extreme situations.

By: Helen Epstein Filed Under: Featured, Music Tagged: Culture Vulture, Kim Kashkashian, Music for Food

Classical Music Sampler: April 2012

April is an unusually excellent month for Boston Symphony Orchestra concerts — a promisng match up of programs and conductors.

By: Susan Miron Filed Under: Classical Music, Coming Attractions, Featured, Music Tagged: Borromeo Quartet, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Church of St. John Evangelist, Handel and Haydn Society, Lisa Saffer, Music for Food, Music from Marlboro, Paco de Lucía, Rafael Popper Kaiser, Sephardic Music, the Emerson String Quartet, World Music/Crash Arts

Classical Music Sampler: February 2012

February feels like the ‘New November’: concerts of real interest during the weekdays and too many great concerts during the weekends.

By: Susan Miron Filed Under: Classical Music, Coming Attractions, Featured, Music Tagged: A Far Cry, Anne Azéma, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Brown Hall, Calderwood Hall, Celebrity-Series, Chameleon Arts Ensemble, Church of St. John the Evangelist, David Finckel, Emanuel Ax, Emmanuel Music, Frank Kelly, George Li, Hugh-Wolff, Ina Zdorovetchi, Isabella-Stewart-Gardner-Museum, Jaap van Zweden, Kurt Masur, Music for Food, NEC, NEC Philharmonia, Philip Setzer, Russell Sherman, The Borromeo String Quartet, The Boston Camerata, Wu Han

Fuse Classical Music Review: Music For Food Presents a Sumptuous Musical Feast

The Music for Food concerts are free, but people are urged to contribute cash, checks or canned goods, a tiny step towards righting “the horrible discrepancies we are living with.”

By: Susan Miron Filed Under: Classical Music, Music Tagged: Kim Kashkahsian, Music for Food

Primary Sidebar

Search

Popular Posts

  • Film Commentary: “Everything Everywhere All at Once” — The Most Serene Movie in Years This movie reminds us that -- if there is any meaning t... posted on May 7, 2022
  • Book Review: Thomas Mann in America In the US, Thomas Mann tacitly proposed himself as an a... posted on May 5, 2022
  • Jazz Album Review: Guitarist John Scofield — A Solo Album, Finally Now that he’s 70, it’s only right that guitarist John... posted on May 3, 2022
  • Jazz Album Review: “Charles Mingus Trio” — One Kind of Masterpiece Even without the new takes, this Rhino reissue would be... posted on May 2, 2022
  • Book Review: The Fascinating Story of “The Method” Isaac Butler’s stories about The Method’s effect on Ame... posted on May 8, 2022

Social

Follow us:

Follow the Conversation

  • Gerald Peary May 15, 2022 at 12:01 pm on Film Review: “The Automat” — A Documentary Love-In to the Restaurant ChainCall me stupid, be angry for a negative review, but why care so much when 95% per cent of the...
  • Dave Kearns May 15, 2022 at 10:08 am on Visual Arts Commentary: Philip Guston and the Impossibility of Art CriticismHave you a copy of Dore Ashton's 1988 essay, "That is Not What I Meant At All: Why Philip Guston...
  • Lisa Hurwitz May 15, 2022 at 2:43 am on Film Review: “The Automat” — A Documentary Love-In to the Restaurant ChainI think you believe this review is cute but when you write such a negative review in the tone you...
  • Preston Gralla May 14, 2022 at 11:53 am on Book Review: Looking Back, Fondly, on “The Modem World”Good point about Fidonet, in particular; you're right about that. Usenet newsgroups, I believe, were even better because they had...
  • Steve Provizer May 13, 2022 at 10:26 am on Jazz Concert Review: Vocalist Kurt Elling — Going Through the World with CuriosityThanks, for your comment, Steve. Yes, he interpolated “He’s Got the Whole World In His Hands” into a tune at...

Footer

  • About Us
  • Advertising/Underwriting
  • Syndication
  • Media Resources
  • Editors and Contributors

We Are

Boston’s online arts magazine since 2007. Powered by 70+ experts and writers.

Follow Us

Monthly Archives

Categories

"Use the point of your pen, not the feather." -- Jonathan Swift

Copyright © 2022 · The Arts Fuse - All Rights Reserved · Website by Stephanie Franz