Arts & Entertainment

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Hits & Misses
Joyce Millman reviews Joni Mitchell's albums "Hits" and "Misses".
Pop Renaissance
Charles Taylor reviews The Cardigans' album "Life".
A Big Bite of The Big Easy
Tony Scherman reviews the compilation "Crescent City Soul: The Sound of New Orleans, 1947-1974".
Being There
Mark Athitakis reviews the album "Being There" by Wilco.
All over the map
Mark Athitakis reviews the album "Being There" by Wilco.
The Vision Thing
Gavin McNett reviews the album "Recovering the Satellites" by The Counting Crows.
Indelible Impression
Michael E. Ross reviews Curtis Mayfield's album "New World Order".
Shocked Value
Once you save your soul, says Michelle Shocked, Making Music is Just the Gravy.
An indelible impression
Michael E. Ross reviews "New World Order" by Curtis Mayfield.
A Sweet Tune From Lennon's Tomb
Mark Hertsgaard reviews "The Beatles Anthology, Volume 2".
From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah
Horrible, beautiful
David Fenton reviews Nirvana's compilation of live tracks entitled "From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah".
Minstrel of Sincerity
Jonathan Richman keeps singing his sweet, nasal songs .
The Cappuccino Conspiracy
Art house film-goers think they're seeing today's best movies. They're wrong.
Ubu Roi
Pere Ubu comes in from the nuclear freeze
The Cappuccino Conspiracy
Art house film-goers think they're seeing today's best movies. They're wrong.
Viva La Vega
Joshua Klein reviews the album "Nine Objects of Desire" by Suzanne Vega.
Staying power
Stephanie Zacharek reviews the album "New Adventures in Hi-Fi" by R.E.M.
The charming oddball
Sharps and Flats is a daily music review.
Songs of Innocence and Experience
For Billy Bragg, returning after a five-year break, the personal is the political -- or is it the other way around?
The Concert for the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame
"The Concert for the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame" offers a righteously partying tour of rock's eclectic history.
Beyond the jazz ghetto
James Marcus reviews Cassandra Wilson's album "New Moon Daughter".
No laughing matter
Maybe it's Hollywood's addiction to formula. Maybe it's a malaise. Maybe it's a Satanic plot. Whatever the reason, movies aren't funny any more.
It's a girl thing
"Girls Town" directed by Jim McKay; "Foxfire" directed by Annette Heywood-Carter
Something in the Way
On "No Code," Eddie Vedder's incandescence takes a back seat to his band's canned flash.
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