Researchers have found a clue in the branches, and used math to describe how the way we see branches in nature and art contributes to our recognition of trees. "We've come up with something ...
For me, I’m listening for the bite,” said Brandon Waltz, a guitar craftsman who fine-tunes each aspect of his custom guitars ...
Inscribed on the nameboard of an ottavino spinet (a small tabletop, or even laptop, harpsichord) dated 1710 and now in the ...
Maryland-based Pressing Strings will debut in Aspen on Friday at D’Angelico Guitars’ Aspen showroom. The room holds only 40 ...
Guitar World's Beatlemaniacs assemble for the deepest of deep dives into the recorded output of a pop-cultural icon and ...
Between brutal fire seasons in Los Angeles, David Longstreth wrote “Song of the Earth,” an album that captures the beauty, ...
A proposed timber sale in the Yaak Valley threatens old-growth trees and habitat. Instead, could it become the nation’s first ...
Silent Skies” — an exhibition of paintings and drawings of critically endangered and extinct birds — is on display at the ...
Virtuoso pianist, transcriber, composer, visual artist and poet Asiya Korepanova will perform at 7:30 p.m. Friday, March 28, ...
(CNN) — Trees depicted in famous artworks across a range of styles follow the same mathematical rules as their real-life counterparts, scientists have found. The math concept hidden in this tree ...