Monk invites us to 'Celebration'
Performance artist challenges syntax at Rollins Chapel
Performance artist challenges syntax at Rollins Chapel
Top Hollywood producer speaks about his hits and misses, making it in the biz and staying true to his craft
Joshua Redman will perform selections from 'Timeless Tales (For Changing Times)' at Spaulding Auditorium
Upper Valley musicians celebrate sixteen strong years together
Powerful two-gallery exhibition of World War prints shows how we have changed and how we have not
Top-rated NBC medical drama retains its creative and popular success after four years
Cassandra Wilson sings from her latest album at the Hop tonight
In 1996, a year and half after her daughter's body was found under a workbench in her brother's basement, Gloria Davis approached filmmaker Bess O'Brien. "You don't know me," Davis said, "but I've seen 'Journey into Courage' (a documentary O'Brien made about domestic violence) and I want you to make a movie about my daughter." Intrigued by Gloria and moved by her story, O'Brien agreed, and spent the next year obtaining footage of Gloria and her remaining daughter, April, for what would become the documentary "Where is Stephanie?" "I became really close to (Gloria and April) over the course of filming," O'Brien said.
Ambitious and delicious, the latest from U. K. rave monsters is delirious, sexed-up fun for grown-ups
The Enfield Shaker Singers will bring their long religious tradition to Faulkner Recital Hall this afternoon, as part of the Vaughan Recital Series.
A celebration of Rroma arts arraives at the Hopkins Center tonight for a survey of authentic Gypsy culture
Director Scott Silver manages to make a television show into a movie, showing that adaptations can be done well
Combining old and new tunes, the recently released soundtrack to the movie "Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels" is a wild ride through a collage of musical styles.
You might know him as the "Cherry Coke" guy. "Cherry Coke is where it's at, won't get you drunk, won't make you fat" is the catchy chorus of one of Britt Myers' '00 most popular songs.
Boys of the Lough, a world-renowned traditional Celtic band, will perform tonight at the Lebanon Opera House. With over three decades of experience, Boys of the Lough know Celtic music, and bring the traditional music of Ireland and Scotland to audiences all over the world. The Boys shun vocalists and electric instruments, which they feel would be inappropriate for the traditional music they play. Instead, they rely on a range of acoustic instruments played traditionally to capture the true spirit of the music they write and perform.
It appears as though artists these days are more inclined to actually wrest away creative and financial control of their music from the "evil" record labels, especially when they are as well-known as the Artist Formerly Known as Prince. The release of "1999: The New Masters" (NPG Records), brings back memories of the album that fully broke Prince Rogers Nelson into the mainstream.
Small Vermont town of Marlboro boasts acclaimed music festival that includes Dartmouth on its tour
Roger Ebert was always my favorite of the two. He was more dependable, more consistent and often more intellectual. And yet, without Gene Siskel, I probably would have considered Ebert snotty and annoying, too concerned with the theory and craft of films, not at all in-tune with actual movie audiences. Siskel was the human element in the duo's chemistry.
Johnny Depp and Al Pacino sizzle as two low-life friends on opposite sides of the law
New exhibition, 'A Winter's Promise,' displays the depth and expertise of famed painter Willard Metcalf