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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 10:50pm GMT
The film “The End of New Music” documents a 2005 tour of rock clubs and alternative spaces by a group of composers who reject the conventions of concert halls.
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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 10:47pm GMT
“Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix” does not open in theaters in the United States and Europe until July 11, but the reviews are already rolling in.
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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 10:28pm GMT
The trombonist John Fedchock has led his New York Big Band for the better part of two decades: a feat of tenacity, and maybe downright stubbornness.
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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 10:26pm GMT
“Introducing the Dwights,” directed by Cherie Nowlan from a script by Keith Thompson, is a funny-sad, icky-sweet comedy of family dysfunction.
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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 10:23pm GMT
About 350 organists are registered participants in the regional convention of the American Guild of Organists this week in New York.
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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 9:53pm GMT
A statue has become a blazing symbol of Italy’s legal and moral battle against foreign museums and private collectors.
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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 9:50pm GMT
By turns playful, sexy, tragic and contemplative, “Flying” is an addictive soap about sexuality and sisterhood.
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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 9:32pm GMT
“Rescue Dawn” is a satisfying genre picture that challenges the viewer’s expectations.
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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 9:30pm GMT
James Kudelka’s “Cinderella,” on show this week at the Metropolitan Opera House with American Ballet Theater, would be a good idea for a ballet.
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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 12:47pm GMT
Beverly Sills, the Brooklyn-born soprano, was a genuine celebrity and an invaluable advocate for the fine arts.
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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 9:38am GMT
In her keenly observed novel “Flower Children,” Maxine Swann depicts four children who worry that their hippie parents’ unconventional lifestyle has put them outside the mainstream of ordinary life.
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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 1:50am GMT
Ms. Solt was an American poet known for helping disseminate the art of concrete poetry, which marries words and typography to produce works in which the verbal and the visual are inextricably intertwined.
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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 1:50am GMT
Mr. Fabro was a prominent artist and theorist in Arte Povera, a movement that began in Italy in the 1960s and championed unusual materials and unorthodox ideas.
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Posted: July 3rd, 2007, 12:57am GMT
Hy Zaret was one of the last of the Tin Pan Alley lyricists, whose most indelible work was the oft-recorded 1955 hit “Unchained Melody” but whose oeuvre ranged from jingles to songs about science to ballads of love and war.