Where to Find Classical Music Vinyl and CDs in Dallas

Amidst all the recent talk of a “vinyl resurgence” and the renewed admiration for physical media in music, one niche seems to miss its fair share of the attention. Countless reissues, think pieces and brick-and-mortar retail stores have sprung up in favor of re-emphasizing the importance of tangible music formats;…

100 Dallas Creatives: No. 11 Moody Fuqua, Music Community Organizer

Mixmaster presents “100 Creatives,” in which we feature cultural entrepreneurs of Dallas in random order. Fresh off the 18th year anniversary party, the guys at Crown & Harp have a lot to be thankful for, particularly our next Dallas luminary, Moody Fuqua. Since 2013, Fuqua’s been doing everything there, from…

7 Awesome Free Events This Week

Recycled Cinema A college football championship win recently brought a swarm of notoriety to the Ohio State name, but there are other badass things happening at that university, outside the athletics department. Roger Beebe is an Associate Professor in Ohio State University’s Art Department and he’s found interesting ways to…

Loris Gréaud and What He Didn’t Create for His Art Exhibition

Last Friday afternoon, I stepped into the Dallas Contemporary galleries with select members of the press to get an early view of Loris Gréaud’s The Unplayed Notes Museum, an exhibition meant to fill the mammoth warehouse space — roughly 26,000 square feet of emptiness for the artist to play in…

100 Dallas Creatives: No. 13 Will Power, Playwright and Mentor

Mixmaster presents “100 Creatives,” in which we feature cultural entrepreneurs of Dallas in random order. Since Will Power arrived in Dallas he’s been busy. With a background in performance, writing and education, he’s not just creating his own work but he’s investing in the work of future generations. Originally commissioned…

100 Dallas Creatives: No. 14 Janeil Engelstad, an Artist with Purpose

Mixmaster presents “100 Creatives,” in which we feature cultural entrepreneurs of Dallas in random order. Janeil Engelstad is an artist. A photographer. A curator. An educator. A producer. A former Fulbright Scholar. A tea drinker. One of the busiest people in town. And she’s turned that “busyness” into an asset…

A Most Violent Year Never Quite Summons Rough Old New York

The world needs fewer tasteful movies about distasteful things. It definitely doesn’t need J.C. Chandor’s A Most Violent Year, in which Oscar Isaac plays a nouveau-riche heating-oil baron in early-1980s New York, striving to maintain his principles amid industry corruption and generally scummy behavior. Isaac’s Abel Morales skulks through most…

Jennifer Aniston Makes a Makeup-Free Awards Play in Cake

Each year, screenwriters kill off enough off-screen children to fill a Chuck E. Cheese’s. A dead son or daughter gives a movie the illusion of depth plus an easy explanation for whatever the script ladles on the surviving parents. Binge-drinking? Nymphomania? Sudden bouts of breakdancing? Blame the wee coffin. In…

Jennifer Lopez’s The Boy Next Door Is as Nuts as You Hope It Is

The most pleasurably ludicrous highlight of The Boy Next Door comes half an hour in, before the sex and murders and something’s-in-the-mirror-behind-her! jolts that stud the film like Flavor Crystals. The high school English teacher played by Jennifer Lopez is dazzled by a gift from the handsome student (Ryan Guzman)…

Pacino, Levinson, and Philip Roth Stare Down the End

There’s something bracingly honest about The Humbling, Barry Levinson’s movie about a 67-year-old Shakespearean actor, played by Al Pacino, who, after being struck with crippling anxiety, gets his mojo restored — some of it, anyway — by a manipulative muse (Greta Gerwig). Based on the 2009 Philip Roth novel of…

If Mortdecai Had a Time Machine, It Could Be 1965’s Top Comedy

Mortdecai is creeping into theaters with the flushed shame of a debutante who expects to be pelted with tomatoes. It’s a pity. In 1965, Mortdecai would be the hit of the year. Director David Koepp whips through this pop-colored caper about crooked art dealer Charlie Mortdecai (Johnny Depp) — one…

The Hottest Comic in Town

Comedian John Mulaney’s single life goal is to make everyone laugh — and not just the people in the audience. Mulaney worked on Saturday Night Live for a few seasons, and he helped create Stefon, the deranged nightclub reviewer played by Bill Hader. He worked on scripts with Hader before…

Swing, Sister

Swing, Sister! In the mood for a little nostalgia? Hide your cellphone and put in your pin curls or dust off those wingtips: “In the Mood” will help you escape to a time when text was a noun and necking was a thing. This Thursday, you and your main squeeze…