For those who live gig to gig, immediate income loss can be disastrous, and some particularly vulnerable organizations might never recover.
Brian Howe
Updated: Carolina Performing Arts Cancels Remainder of Season; PlayMakers Pauses “Julius Caesar”
UNC’s performing-arts presenter and on-campus theater joins the coronavirus cancellation fray.
For Choreographer and Dance Teacher ShaLeigh Comerford, the Pedagogical Is Personal
ShaLeigh Dance Works marks five prolific years in Durham with the premiere of its latest evening-length work, “The In-Between,” at The Fruit this weekend.
Record Store Day 2020 Brings a New LP and Two Singles from Merge
Been waiting to cop Archers of Loaf’s new “Raleigh Days” single in an era-appropriate physical format? Save a little scratch for April.
Time to Plan Your Summer Dance Card: The New ADF Season Just Dropped.
For its 87th (not a typo) year, the internationally recognized steward of modern dance brings some expected names and some nice surprises to Durham, including a spotlight on local choreographers.
Nightlight Drops Lineup and Wristbands for Rise from Your Grave, a New Electronic Music Festival
We’ve gotten spoiled by having an electronic fest in the Triangle each spring. Now that Moogfest is gone, Rise from Your Grave is here to ensure that we don’t have to go without.
NC Theatre’s 2020-21 Season Celebrates the Jukebox Musical
Gloria Estefan, Johnny Cash, Billie Holiday, and other household names fill a six-show season called “Sing Out and Soar.”
A New Label. A New Weekly Party. A New Level for Local Club-Music Culture? Maison Fauna Is Going In.
Four Durham DJs band together with the aim of filling in the center of the Triangle’s growing but scattered house-and-techno scene.
Chris Titchner Has the Second-Person Blues on “Already Gone”
A pesky pronoun slightly curdles the sweet sound of the Raleigh singer-songwriter’s first album in more than a decade.
Triangle First: A Murder Ballad Done Bright in The Dead Tongues’ “Little Sadie”
The odd moral neutrality of the early-twentieth-century folk song has drawn generations of singers to record it; Ryan Gustafson follows the likes of Bob Dylan and Doc Watson.

