Smither, right, and his band Lindale

MANY VISUAL ARTISTS, regardless of their chosen medium, love music. They love to talk about it, they have music playing when they work — but only a select few are brave enough to pick up an instrument and try their hand at playing in front of an audience.

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HUSBAND AND WIFE Markus and Melissa Jean Cone, who make music together as Twin Lovers, and are currently gigging in support of their new album Hero, are seated on a bench in a tiny park in the Heights. Markus, a classically trained pianist with a passion for synthesizers, is tall, with a great pair of eyebrows that complement his thoughtful, serious demeanor. Melissa occasionally brushes her dark bangs from her eyes, her sotto voce speaking voice belying the rich, full-bodied timbre of her vocals on their recordings.

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Art + Entertainment

Huang Ruo / photo by Wenjun Miakoda Liang

HUANG RUO's STRING quartet A Dust in Time begins simply, with an ascending perfect fourth in the cello, and the quiet reply of a major second in the viola. The violins remain silent as the contrapuntal dialog develops like two voices engaged in prayer. Over the course of 60 minutes, the music increases in complexity and volume, leaving the listener to wonder at times where one voice begins and another ends, before returning to the original back and forth between viola and cello.

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