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latest in today
We are bowled over! We knew that theartsdesk.com had plenty of supporters out there – we’ve always had a loyal readership of arts…
There was so much to be thankful for throughout the three days I spent at the Aldeburgh Festival this year. First, of course, to have…
Fifty years since Benjamin Britten died, and his operas are still in repertory: half a dozen of them at least. It’s a tribute to his…
One sometimes finds oneself wondering whether Harlan Coben is an author or a set of AI procedures designed to manufacture plots of…
Calcutta plays an important supporting role in Satyajit Ray’s The Big City (Mahanagar), though we only catch glimpses of it until the film’…
Language is a weapon in the RSC’s vigorous adaptation of Cyrano de Bergerac – we feel viscerally that wordplay is just one letter away…
VINYL OF THE MONTHEd O’Brien Blue Morpho (Transgressive)
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The last thing…
Terrorists are monsters. Or so we are told – pure evil. Well, it makes a good story. Even if it isn’t completely true. Actually, most…
Judging from her second album, young country singer Willow Avalon has kissed her fair share of frogs. She doesn’t let them off the hook.…
Modesty is the last refuge of fantasy franchises once too big to fail. Much like The Mandalorian and Grogu and Captain America: Brave New…
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Fifty years since Benjamin Britten died, and his operas are still in repertory: half a dozen of them at least. It’s a tribute to his…
When Lahti’s Sibelius Hall finally shone and coruscated into life in 2000, the 100,000 citizens of this modest Finnish town, not to mention…
VINYL OF THE MONTHEd O’Brien Blue Morpho (Transgressive)
Image
The last thing…
Jews may or may not have built the pyramids, but we know for certain that they built Hollywood. The names of the men who founded MGM, 20th…
The lakeside beach that is the only scene of action in Alain Guiraudie’s Stranger by the Lake is a concentrated crucible of desires. The…
Aptly scheduled for our Great British Heatwave, writer Catherine Shepherd’s eight-part drama whisks us away to a remote Greek island, where…
It is all too easy to be cynical about the ballet version of Don Quixote. With almost no part for the title character, it is a 19th-century…
A thirtysomething American woman with wavering self-confidence, a tendency to talk too much and a longing for married bliss with Mr Darcy…
Some years after Chronicles (2004) a book that broke moulds and delighted with its originality, and as with albums that often came with…
Reviewed this month with the windows open, in weather hot enough to warp records, this month theartsdesk on Vinyl casts two ears over 34…