Music Review: Way to Blue
By Dan Fishman | April 18, 2013Listening to Way to Blue has helped me understand what about Drake is inimitable.
Listening to Way to Blue has helped me understand what about Drake is inimitable.
“Something appealing, something appalling, something for everyone, a comedy tonight!”
Am I alone in the woods, kneeling and reeling after nearly being executed? Or am I escaping my past on an old Honda motorcycle?
The interactive immersion of CANE prompts the audience to reflect on how history is realized.
Importantly: The Shouting Matches sound nothing at all like Bon Iver.
I really wanted to like the new Evil Dead remake. I promise.
“The upcoming concert is very challenging, and [it] has provided an opportunity for the musicians to stretch their ability.”
"I’ve been writing many songs about a particular girl of interest who I don’t believe feels the same way about me."
“What’s exciting is that [Kwilecki’s collection] is kind of incomparable. Who else has spent forty years in one place?”
In Durham and at Duke, jazz expands with each passing year.
Tina Fey is Tina Fey and Paul Rudd is Paul Rudd.
Kurt Vile is comfortable enough to write songs about how much he loves his wife.
“I knew when we started, I wasn’t going to shy away from any of this.”
It feels foolish to talk in abstract terms because there is little abstract here.
Arts editor Katie Zaborsky and Music editor Dan Fishman recorded a podcast-review of James Blake's new album, Overgrown.
#artsconfessions: I am a Bio major. #scienceconfessions: I am an editor for this arts publication and I play in the orchestra.
Ward, who died last week at the age of 95, created award-winning operas, symphonies and instrumental pieces.
“How come we don’t talk about these things? How come we don’t know this? How come this isn’t in the national debate?”
The English department and the Blackburn Fund will host a poetry reading by Blackburn Visiting Poet Jay Wright and a play reading the following night.
The Bryan Center’s Sheafer Lab Theater has become a surreal, Cocteau-inspired, pseudo-Renaissance wonderland.