The Feldman Dynamic: Seder-in-Place
Brian Feldman celebrates the holiday online.
Brian Feldman celebrates the holiday online.
Performance Art for the quarantined.
The cross-dressing comic returned to Memphis with history, philosophy, and plenty of laughs.
The Feldman clan meets for dinner celebrating 15 years of Brian Feldman making surreal magic.
Brian Feldman calls me from the last functioning pay phone in Orlando and sings me a show tune.
Five local critics read some their reviews of past Brian Feldman projects to Brian’s face.
Performance art, Brian Feldman, communication, anniversary Brian Feldman present the 10th anniversary of his big hit “txtshow”
Proto-type Theater , a performance troupe based in Brooklyn, NY and Lancaster, England, revisits themes of love, death, and fame seen through the prism of Bonnie and Clyde in Third Person (Redux).
Praying Mantis (Noble Rot). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Carl F Gauze catches a fleeting glimpse of Philippe Petit , the man who strung a wire between the towers of the World Trade Center and walked across it one morning.
Big Treasure – The Best of Ten Years (TVS and Two Fingers). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Big Science (Nonesuch Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Three hundred pages of sadomasochistic poetry. Carl F Gauze asks if he may have another.
If locking up performance artists sounds like a good idea to you, Carl F. Gauze might have the next best thing with a review of the special “Incarceration” issue of Sandbox.
In this latest installment of his weekly series, Christopher Long discovers and scores a secondhand vinyl copy of one of his all-time favorite LPs: 2XS (To Excess), the splendid 1982 flop from the iconic Scottish powerhouse, Nazareth.
A Murmuration of Capitalist Bees (Expert Work Records, Dipterid Records). Review by Peter Lindblad.
Author and longtime Ink 19 contributor Christopher Long kicks off the 2025 edition of his popular weekly Garage Sale Vinyl series with a bona fide banger: the blues-soaked, whisky-injected, self-titled 1971 debut record from Bonnie Raitt.
Hear My Song: The Collection, 1966 - 1995 (Madfish Music). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Seijun Suzuki’s 1958 widescreen film noir feature, Underworld Beauty, comes to Blu-ray.
Phil Bailey reviews quirky sexploitation film Facets of Love (1973), a saucy Hong Kong costume drama from director Li Hsang-han of kung fu powerhouse Shaw Brothers, now out on Blu-ray.
Longtime Ink 19 staff writer Christopher Long spent almost the entire year consuming and writing about new music. Here are his personal Dirty Dozen: the 12 records that made his heart the happiest in 2024.
Stormchaser (Inebriated Music / Anthem Entertainment). Review by Christopher Long.
Let It Rock: Live from the San Francisco Civic Center 1980 (Liberation Hall). Review by Bob Pomeroy.