Cliff Notez is many things, among them a musician and an advocate. Through his projects, including Boston Answering — a showcase that elevates the city’s brimming talent as an alternative to Boston ...
Cliff Notez recently created an annual tradition. He now takes the month of November to unplug, unwind and reflect while still making music. “No-Notez November was something I started after being at ...
In north Cambridge, artist Cliff Notez sits inside his recording studio — a small, slightly cramped 280-foot space filled with keyboards and sound equipment — and looks around with pride. "This is the ...
Last year, when Boston hip hop artists Cousin Stizz and STL GLD were on the lineup, Dorchester’s Cliff Notez was thrilled to show up and support his friends at Boston Calling. It felt good, he says, ...
In the front room of the Jamaica Plain collective known as White Haus, Boston hip-hop artist Cliff Notez sits on a throne of his own creation: a pink floral armchair with a baroque wood frame that he ...
Cliff Notez is an award-winning Boston-based multimedia artist, musician, and cultural connector whose work moves fluidly across hip hop, jazz, folk, soul, and R&B. Known for pairing incisive lyricism ...
Cliff Notez remembers the first time they felt truly included in the world of folk music. Growing up, the Boston artist consumed a steady diet of the genre in their mother’s car, where mainstream ...
American Repertory Theater (A.R.T.) at Harvard University, under the leadership of Terrie and Bradley Bloom Artistic Director Diane Paulus and Executive Producer Diane Borger, is pleased to announce ...
2 OH, MARY! Reveals Tour Dates and Cities For 2026-27 3 OPERATION MINCEMEAT Reveals 2026-27 Tour Dates and Cities THOMAS WILKINS, BSO MUSICIANS, AND MOE POPE AND STL GOLD IN MULTI-VIDEO COLLABORATION, ...
Boston rapper Cliff Notez poses an answer in the title of his new album, “Why the Wild Things Are,” and then proceeds to unwind the questions that bring the listener to that place. “Is it worth ...
Cliff Notez’s latest album, “Why the Wild Things Are,” goes from the joyful, hooky, Top 10-ready hip-hop of “Happy” to mournful, almost-broken guitar ballad “Losing Crowns II” in an instant. For the ...
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