Music
Dimensions in Music: The Art of the Cello, Extended: Charles Curtis Plays Waking States
By Alan LockwoodPossessed of a microtonal pitch acuity with which he mirrors sine waves, and in command of an exquisite technique that earned him first soloist chair in Hamburgs North German Radio Orchestra, cellist Charles Curtis bridges the out and in sides of classical music.
Walking When the Woods Were Wild
By Scott MarshallOver four CDs, Jozef van Wissem attempts contemporary amalgams of Renaissance lute pieces. These well-intentioned efforts are often subverted by the quirky slide guitar of Gary Lucas, sounding far more out of place than in his glory days in Captain Beefhearts last Magic Band.
Anthrax: Fearsome, Ridiculous, and Charming
By Sarahjane BlumOn the corner of Forty-Fourth and Broadway, below two facing marquees uneasily promoting Fiddler on the Roof and Anthrax, are visitors checking carefully to ensure they know exactly where their line begins and the other ends.
Make Me Feel Something
By Grant MoserSeductive and moody and oh-so-beautifully textured, the songs of Calla are reflections and shadowy whispers from your hidden corners. Listening to these songs is like sitting at a dark corner table in a basement bar, or being underground with a fallen angel telling you fables, or walking the city on a quiet night, or waking up from a dream and trying to grasp at the fleeting images that just recently occupied your mind.
In Conversation
Parthenia with Phong Bui
After their usual Sunday afternoon practice, Rail Publisher Phong Bui visited the Carroll Garden studio of Rosamund Morley and Larry Lipnik, two members of Parthenia, a critically acclaimed New York-based viol consort whose ethereal, spirited and virtuoso performances of sixteenth to twenty-first century music has delighted audiences across the United States and Europe.