Adam Zagajewski
Of the poets who have been awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature during the last quarter century or so, almost all of them are primarily concerned with history and the individual’s place within the historical swirl. Of...
Read MoreDec 2, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Of the poets who have been awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature during the last quarter century or so, almost all of them are primarily concerned with history and the individual’s place within the historical swirl. Of...
Read MoreDec 1, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Mary Isabel Catherine Bernadette O’Brien was, of course, Dusty Springfield. Shelby Lynne is, of course, Shelby Lynne. The intersection of these two singers—one a phenomenally popular beehive-haired, blue-eyed-soul...
Read MoreNov 20, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Joe DeVito comes onstage with no gimmicks. He doesn’t sing songs, wear funny clothes, or pretend to be anything other than what he is: a nerdy, clever New York Italian. We should all be so comfortable in our own...
Read MoreNov 18, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
When Cadillac Sky’s album Blind Man Walking appeared early last year, bluegrass fans didn’t know quite what to make of it. These musicians from Fort Worth, Texas, took the generally conservative sound of bluegrass...
Read MoreNov 13, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
If Chris Canas isn’t livin’ the blues, he sure knows how to channel it. This guitarist and singer, with jazz training from the Ann Arbor School for the Performing Arts, recorded his first blues CD at seventeen. Now...
Read MoreNov 11, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Shortly after gaining independence from Russia in 1991, Estonia ditched socialism and embraced capitalism. The result was a balanced budget, no public debt, and one of the world’s fastest-growing economies. Perhaps not...
Read MoreNov 10, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Accounts of Eugene Chadbourne’s music usually state in one way or another that it’s impossible to predict what will happen during his shows. While this is indeed noteworthy in a calculating world, it’s not...
Read MoreNov 9, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Whether Yiddish is a dead language or reviving has been an ongoing source of debate ever since Hitler murdered most of its European practitioners, and its American speakers, of whom there were many even into the 1940s and 1950s,...
Read MoreNov 8, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Pieces of women peek out from behind shadows, prison bars, and maximum-security doors in the current collection of Jane Atwood’s photographs at the Slusser Gallery. Taken throughout the 1990s in prisons from Arizona to the...
Read MoreNov 6, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
For many the tenor saxophone is the totemic instrument of mainstream jazz, and Joe Lovano is one of its prime high priests. Born in Cleveland into a family that worshipped music, he was largely self taught, although mentored by...
Read MoreOct 30, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
I think I want to play the bassoon. Really, really well. I know, everyone says it’s one of the hardest instruments to play, but I figure if I make a plan and stick to it—you know, maybe start with some DVDs, take some...
Read MoreOct 29, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
The narrator of Nicholas Delbanco’s big new historical novel, The Count of Concord, tells us near the end of it “that Franklin Roosevelt said the three most interesting men, the three most impressive minds in our...
Read MoreOct 19, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Two years ago, German violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter told Musical America she planned to stop performing “when I reach my forty-fifth birthday,” that is, in June 2008. Shortly afterward, however, she told the...
Read MoreOct 17, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
There are currently two disparate trends in the practice of jazz and improvised music in our country. One is firmly committed to maintaining a strictly defined tradition and therefore requires long apprenticeship, now mainly...
Read MoreOct 16, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
The Bellamy Brothers first came on the scene in 1975 with a pleasant if absolutely white-bread country-pop hit called “Let Your Love Flow.” The kind of music they made was soon redefined as country, and for most of...
Read MoreOct 16, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Back in the 1980s, Amy Hempel became famous for one extraordinary short story, “In the Cemetery Where Al Jolson Is Buried.” In it the narrator visits a friend who is in the last stages of cancer, and the two women...
Read MoreOct 13, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
There are singers, and there are people with beautiful voices. The two are by no means mutually exclusive, but neither do they always coexist. Of course, there are also plenty of successful so-called singers—who aren’t—and...
Read MoreOct 4, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Rodney Crowell got his start in the 1970s as a member of Emmylou Harris’s Hot Band, a key point of departure for the artistically ambitious side of contemporary country music. In Nashville he was best known for a while as...
Read MoreOct 3, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
I’m confused about Counter Cosby. Are they musical geniuses or are they impaired in some way? It’s hard to tell.When I saw them perform last winter at TC’s Speakeasy, they actually were impaired. They played...
Read MoreOct 3, 2008 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Visitors to the Ypsilanti Historical Museum on North Huron Street enter a lovely furnished 1860s Italianate home with gracious high-ceilinged rooms. I never go there without wishing I could move in (or at least throw a party...
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