Fuse Music Feature: Mr. Airplane Man " Return Flight
Mr. Airplane Man was beloved in the local blues world and the Abbey Lounge garage-rock circuit. They play their first local shows in nine years this week.
Mr. Airplane Man was beloved in the local blues world and the Abbey Lounge garage-rock circuit. They play their first local shows in nine years this week.
Mariana Rondón's Bad Hair is a beautifully acted film about the stultifying pressures on downtrodden lives.
This week, The New England Foundation for the Arts (NEFA) announced that Cathy Edwards will become NEFA's new Executive Director.
Arts Fuse critics select the best in music, film, dance, theater, and author readings for the coming  week.
Entertaining yet incisive, The Conquest of Plassans remains a devastatingly acute reminder that religion and politics make surprisingly compatible bedfellows.
Planes, Trains, and Automobiles at the MFA is a delightful exhibition dedicated to vehicular speed, mobility, style, and joy.
If you want to expand your heart and mind this holiday season, you couldn't do better than go to The Little Prince.
Charies D'Ambrosio's short fiction collections were finalists for major awards, but it is his essays that I return to again and again.
Arts Fuse critics select the best in music, dance, film, theater, and author readings for the coming  week.
In 1957, Women's Wear Daily called Andy Warhol "the Leonardo da Vinci of the shoe trade."
At their best, each artist leverages the power of abstraction to bewilder in playful ways that provoke compelling ideas and a variety of emotional reactions.
The irony is that there is precious little theory in The Theory of Everything -- no real exploration of Stephen Hawking's ideas and what makes them so important.
With grace and wit, Alexander Calder's artwork integrated poetry and science, aesthetics and engineering.
Among the most haunting aspects of Roman Polanski's 1971 film version of Macbeth is his visceral depiction of the tragedy's violence.
This was was a truly memorable afternoon at Symphony Hall, filled with interesting programming decisions and exciting revelations.
Arts Fuse critics select the best in music, film, theater, and author readings for the coming  week.
It may seem a bit like overkill, and in many ways it is, but that all depends on your perspective.
Of all the songs ever written about a woman violated by her brother's ghost after she decapitates him playing croquet, "The Musical Box" remains the best.
It would not be overstating the case to say that Mike Nichols was a social and moral barometer for an entire generation of film and theatergoers.
Because of first-rate performances, St. Vincent rises above Hollywood's standard 'cranky old man finds love through friendship with needy child' trope.
Starchitect Renzo Piano and his team did very well given their constraints. It is damn hard to build the right frame for so much abundant beauty.
What Nerve! takes an innovative and fresh take on a little-noticed but piquant tributary of American art.
First published in 1964, Jean Merrill's classic children's novel has just been reissued by New York Review Books to celebrate its 50th anniversary.
Not all musical retrospectives are a guaranteed success, since time can put rust on many a talent, but Stevie Wonder was ebulliently up for the challenge.
Reading this book is like listening to a lively conversation from a self-proclaimed Kerouac authority giving his opinions over a café con leche late at night at Cafe Pamplona in Harvard Squ…