Americana duo Drew and Ellie Holcomb on the power of personal and artistic collaboration
By Skyler Graham | February 9, 2020Drew and Ellie Holcomb will be performing at the Carolina Theatre Tuesday, Feb. 25 at 8 p.m.
Drew and Ellie Holcomb will be performing at the Carolina Theatre Tuesday, Feb. 25 at 8 p.m.
There’s plenty of brilliance to be found in the Triangle’s local arts scene, but Bright Black Candles and Bougie Luminaries contribute more literally than most.
Durham’s creative collective Mettlesome specializes in improv comedy, but they’re certainly no joke.
The Museum of Durham History commemorates Dr. King’s influence on Durham and its residents in a new exhibition titled “A Creative Protest: MLK Comes to Durham.”
If you’re not keeping up with college radio in the Triangle, it’s time to tune in.
The downtown Durham restaurant has a pleasant atmosphere and just enough pizzazz to make you think that you’re a Great Value Gatsby.
In 1902, a rocket landed in the moon’s eye, and audiences were in awe.
Durham’s food scene is vibrant, but it is more than just the admittedly excellent restaurants in the Five Points area downtown.
Tattoos have undergone a revolution within the past two decades.
Popular eateries can be conflicting.
For anyone suffering from strange-art withdrawals in a post-“Untitled 1” world, Durham’s first iteration of “Oddville! A Festival of the Awesomely Strange” was filled to the brim with kindred spirits.
Duke is haunted. You can find ghosts everywhere you turn: there’s talking statues, whatever Brody Theater is and the spook-tacular Brooks Field at Wallace Wade Stadium (what else could be filling all those empty seats?).
As Motorco begins to brim Oct. 18, Alex G’s opener, ARTHUR, announces: “To all you who just came in, this experimental noise shit is what you get! We already played all our pop songs.”
One small step for man, one giant inflatable moon balloon for Durham.
The quest for good noodles in Durham can lead you down various paths, including Juju on 9th Street and Dashi downtown.
From ”Friends” to scrunchies, our obsession with ‘90s popular culture is no secret, but the steady rise of zine festivals in the past few years suggests that the era’s counterculture is in resurgence, too.
Last Saturday, not even 90-degree weather could prevent crowds from celebrating Pride on Duke’s East Campus.
For many of us, home is our mothers. For makers in the Durham area, home is The Mothership.
Recently named one of the 50 Best New Restaurants in America by Bon Appétit, Durham’s M Tempura specializes in exactly what its name suggests.
When Keke Palmer walked onto the stage at NCCU’s Rock the Lyceum lecture series, her energy was magnetic.