the arts walk
By Jessie Tang | October 30, 2008Those interested in peeking into the various nooks and crannies of Downtown can partake of the semiannual Art Walk, organized by the Durham Arts Council.
Those interested in peeking into the various nooks and crannies of Downtown can partake of the semiannual Art Walk, organized by the Durham Arts Council.
In the wake of new-age dance-rock bands like Architecture in Helsinki and Crystal Castles comes Brooklyn quartet Gang Gang Dance with Saint Dymphna.
The Latin American Film Festival turns 22 this Sunday, but don't expect a quarter-life crisis.
A group of ordinary people-plagued with expressions of awe, fear and tension-stare intently out of the frame at an unseen monitor.
When I was in high school, I dyed my hair four different shades of not-yellow. I was hoping for the Eminem look because he was just so cool. But nothing ever goes as planned.
It's hard to know exactly when a band has "arrived." Some wait for major record deals. Others count MySpace hits.
Sitting in a Washington, D.C., hotel room one week before the presidential election, Billy Bragg is very afraid.
Chapel Hill's early voting ends on Saturday, but that doesn't mean the polls aren't rocking. In fact, they will rock harder than ever Saturday morning as a slew of local bands take the stage for...
Hidden among the fast food chains and gas stations on Fayetteville Street, the Hayti Heritage Center is often a discounted source of both the arts and education.
Deerhunter is bubbling restraint. Their music bristles and reverberates, threatening in equal parts to either explode into tsunami static or fade out completely.
Jonathan Demme succeeds in adding something new to the dysfunctional-family-drama genre with Rachel Getting Married.
Clint Eastwood is old. He is so old that he remembers exactly what Los Angeles looked like during the 1920s.
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street doesn't start with a bang. Instead, a high-pitched, piercing screech immediately sets the dark tone of the musical.
"People always ask me, 'Where do you record?'" Posner said. "And people can't believe when I say, 'In my room.'