You might not recognize this Anne—and that’s exactly what showrunner Moira Walley-Beckett intended
The short-lived show offered the best screen portrayal of the war the country has ever seen
A story of Victorian-age madness and exploration in the South American jungle is coming to a theater near you
The preeminent vocalist didn't actually start out as a singer
Curator Kevin Strait from the African American History Museum details the day he met the great musician
A Smithsonian expert says the film's was undoubtedly a hybrid tea rose
From tiny music boxes to the bus-sized Orchestrion, Siegfried’s Mechanical Music Cabinet in Germany's Rhineland is the perfect musical detour
At the Louisiana State Penitentiary and at a maximum-security prison in Malawi, the benefits of music are far-reaching
A century ago, a recording of the startlingly novel "Livery Stable Blues" helped launch a new genre
Thirty years after Public Enemy's debut album, the group's sonic innovation and powerful activism resonate powerfully today
Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield was in many ways the nation's first black pop star
Carl Laemmle, the founder of Universal Pictures, wrote hundreds of affidavits to help refugees escape Europe
Notable African-American performing artists commemorate the opening of the National Museum of African American History
How one artist created a show inspired by the neurological experience of synesthesia
The dazzling offshoot of the marching band gets its moment in the spotlight
College football seasons come and go, but the joyous thunder of Jackson State's iconic marching band rolls on
The entertainment company has been in the business of Americana since its inception
The record that introduced millions of Americans to a new kind of music
A Smithsonian scholar revisits those critical decisions Jacqueline Kennedy made following the death of her husband
The new film captures the quiet essence of the couples’ powerful story, says Smithsonian scholar Christopher Wilson
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