Ben Winship
Acorns (Snake River Records). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
Acorns (Snake River Records). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
Sparkling outfits and sparkling music for the Holiday Season
Join the Breakthrough family for a recital of their favorite holiday music.
The Spitfire Grill is a sprightly musical with heart, soul and some decent side dishes.
The Little Woman have all grown up and now deal with grown-up issues like marriage and spinsterhood, and how wonderful owning a Proper English Estate might be.
Veils of Winter (Riding Easy Records). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
Legendary Rock Photographer Bill O’Leary snapped darn near every band of note in the past forty years. Float down memory lane from Zappa to Alice Cooper.
A long form inprov show that looks for humor in all the wrong places.
Ebenezer scrooge’s past haunts him yet makes him a better man.
Talk radio burst on to the American radio industry in this dark and prescient look at the future.
The Ninth Trip (Riding Easy). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
The beloved “Peanuts” cartoon strip comes to life on the Winter Park Playhouse Stage
Drugs tear families apart, even as they try to tape them back together.
Eight new plays draw raucous laughter in this season’s version of Play De Luna.
First grade is a tough year, but little Junie passes through the valley of uncomfortable to a triumphant lemon juggling act.
Fairies and flights of romance make this Shakespeare’s frothiest and best love play.
No matter how bad life kicks you, there’s always someone in worst straights you can look down on
Winter Park playhouse favorite Natalie Cordone appears in her eighth cabaret, out distancing rival entertainer Kevin Kelly. But she lets him sing a song and plug a show, so everything is cool.
Two geeks set out to build the perfect woman and discover adulthood instead of what they really wanted.
A Nubian princess captured by the Egyptian falls in love with her captor, and then things spiral into musical theater.
With his latest book, What This Comedian Said Will Shock You, celebrated stand-up Jedi Bill Maher “shocks” readers by doing the most outrageous, unthinkable, and socially unacceptable thing imaginable: he speaks rationally, logically, and objectively.
Gasoline Lollipops’ newest single, “Freedom Don’t Come Easy,” is today’s mother lovin’ punk rock folk anthem.
Frank Henenlotter’s gory grindhouse classic Basket Case looks as grimy as the streets of Times Square, and that is one of the film’s greatest assets. Arrow Video gives this unlikely candidate a welcome fresh release.
Despite the Mother’s Day factor, hundreds of fervent, faithful followers still flocked to Orlando’s famed Plaza Live to catch an earlybird set from Jimmy Failla — one of the hottest names on today’s national comedy scene.
Ink 19 readers get an early listen and look at “Cool Sparkling Water,” a new single from Lonnie Walker.
Jeremy Glazier has a bucket list day at a Los Lobos 50th Anniversary show in Davenport, Iowa.
Carl F. Gauze reviews the not-quite one-woman show, Always… Patsy Cline, based on the true story of Cline’s friendship with Louise Seger, who met the star in l961 and corresponded with Cline until her death.
Carl F. Gauze reviews this interesting look at the surprising history and scandalous etymology of jazz, in Weird Music That Goes On Forever, by Bob Suren.
Two new releases from Free Dirt Records use sound and music to tell stories about our history.