Animal Joy—Shearwater
By Dan Fishman | February 16, 2012Comparing Shearwater to Talk Talk is sort of like comparing a contemporary Irish novelist to James Joyce...
Comparing Shearwater to Talk Talk is sort of like comparing a contemporary Irish novelist to James Joyce...
By tonight, you’ll know the LDOC lineup.
Me Too Monologues will host its fourth annual show this weekend.
Nicolas Godin and Jean-Benoit Dunckel, a.k.a.
You’d be right to call Die Antwoord an oddity, but you probably wouldn’t be doing it for the right reasons.
Sharon Van Etten’s voice has a magical quality of transposition.
It is quite possible that, by the time this article is in print, Duke Memes will have already followed the path of Lana Del Rey—the awkward upstart turned blogosphere sensation who met visceral...
“We just want to emote ‘til we’re dead.” This epitaph-to-be has become a pretty accurate M.O. for Kevin Barnes’ work during the past half-decade.
Portland folkies Blind Pilot, who will perform Feb. 21 at Cat’s Cradle, are no strangers to the Triangle.
Just like the antique Peugeot that whisks Owen Wilson to the Parisian 1920’s in Woody Allen’s Midnight in Paris, Sharon Van Etten’s voice has a magical quality of transposition.
It seems strange that a kid with an abusive father, a nonexistent social circle and a decided lack of on-screen appeal would want to videotape every second of his life.
Durham Arts Council’s recent announcement of this year’s crop of Ella Fountain Pratt Emerging Artists Grants...
In the second part of Chilean author Roberto Bolano’s masterful 2666, a university professor ...
A few weeks ago, the New York Times published an editorial by Susan Cain entitled “The Rise of the New Groupthink.”
Fiasco Theater Company will bring Cymbeline and its commitment to educating aspiring actors at Duke.
I’d like to talk today about the Twitter persona @dadboner, and for the many of you who have no idea who that is, just stop reading now.
First Aid Kit launched their career with a novel YouTube oddity that’s received almost 3 million hits.
Albert Nobbs, starring perennial favorite Glenn Close as a cross-dressing waiter, aims high but falls short...
The “Liam Neeson movie,” for better or worse, has essentially become an action sub-genre in its own right.