The new scene emerges; Halloween preparations
By DAVID DAY | September 12, 2007
SOUL-CLAPPED: Felix da Housecat does the Middlesex Lounge on Halloween. |
Fall preview 2007 “Happy endings: Bad news begets good tunes.” By Matt Ashare. “Busy busy: Something for everyone this fall.” By Debra Cash. “Stage worthies: Fall on the Boston boards.” By Carolyn Clay. “Bounty: The best of the season’s roots, world, folk, and blues.” By Ted Drozdowski. “War, peace, and Robert Pinsky: The season’s fiction, non-fiction, and poetry.” By John Freeman. “Trane, Joyce Dee Dee, Sco, and more: A jam-packed season of jazz.” By Jon Garelick. “Turn on the bright lights: Art, women, politics, and food.” By Randi Hopkins. “War zones: Fall films face terror at home and abroad.” By Peter Keough. “Locked and loaded: The fall promises a double-barreled blast of gaming greatness.” By Mitch Krpata. “BBC? America!: The networks put some English on the fall TV season.” By Joyce Millman. “World music: The BSO goes traveling, and Berlin comes to Boston.” By Lloyd Schwartz. “Singles scene: Local bands dig in with digital.” By Will Spitz.
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If 2006 was the year Boston germinated, 2007 is the year it grows up. Basstown, as some in the scene have taken to calling it, is the crop of manic dance nights with home-grown party-rave DJs and a crowd that may be even wilder. Boston loves to wild out as much as it likes to rock out, and from Allston to Jamaica Plain to Cambridge, and most places in between, you find a night of stomping tunes in every corner.When it comes to high-class, bottle-service-style trends, no area owns the game like the Theater District, with its revolving door of clubs and club nights, all seeking to be new and fresh. MANTRA (52 Temple Place, Boston; 617.542.8111) leads the chi-chi pack; the new night is called NYC VAULT THURSDAYS and features the stylings of DJ DEKA. Promising New York hard and vocal house music, it kicks off with an invite-only soiree before featuring guests like MICHAEL KNYTE (September 27), DJSTRICT (October 4), and, up from New York, MIDNIGHT SOCIETY (October 11). The driving force is monthly Rise resident Deka, who if he lives up to his on-line biography will “take you on a journey through musical euphoria.”
On the flipside is the Thursday party MAKE IT NEW at MIDDLESEX LOUNGE (315 Mass Ave, Cambridge; 617.868.MSEX) every week. For more than three years, the highbrow night has been bringing the absolute latest in pure dance sound courtesy of residents BILLY KIELY, ALAN MANZI, and BALTIMORODER. With local-music distributor Forced Exposure at its back, you can expect only the freshest wax. (Let me acknowledge that I am a former Forced Exposure employee.) September 20 features the international style of JEFF SAMUEL, who can be heard on Poker Flat, the celebrated techno label of choice.
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Another “Festival of Films from Iran” opens at the Museum of Fine Arts, and the Bush Administration still hasn’t started bombing Tehran.
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It’s payback time for Boston’s blues and roots music scene.
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When I first realized that movies would, for better or worse, dominate my imagination forever, I really gave no thought to the forces at work creating these transfiguring images on a screen.
- Sooner or later?
While interviewing Paul Greengrass, I was determined not to ask the question that has dogged United 93 like a tag line: “Is it too soon?” It didn’t matter; within five minutes he would ask it himself.
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Matthew Broderick sleepwalks through Peter Tolan’s debut film as a hack TV writer with a gambling addiction.
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- One sings, one doesn’t
This year, at least one element in “Boston Film Festival” is no longer true.
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