Italy's daily death toll from coronavirus on Wednesday was the lowest for six days, according to the country's officials.
16.03.2020 - 22:31 / pitchfork.com
Buck Curran didn’t plan to end up in Bergamo. An experimental guitarist from Maine who performed for years with the drone-folk outfit Arborea, he found himself in the mid 2010s spending increasingly large stretches of time on the road in Europe, where his meditative music seemed to connect particularly well with listeners.
After Arborea played its final European tour in 2015, he decided to stay on in Switzerland for a while, using it as a home base for solo tours across the continent. He landed
.Italy's daily death toll from coronavirus on Wednesday was the lowest for six days, according to the country's officials.
The fifth episode of “Oprah Talks COVID-19” is now available to stream.
Oscar-winning Italian director Gabriele Salvatores (“Mediterraneo”) is making “Voyage in Italy” a doc using material from social media and other sources chronicling life in lockdown in the country that at present has suffered the most deaths due to coronavirus.
Martha Wainwright acted as virtual choirmaster
A mum on lockdown in Italy has been sharing the dos and don’ts of self-isolation.
A mum living in Italy has issued mums a list of dos and don'ts she wishes she'd done before the country went into coronavirus lockdown.
One day at a time. Tom Hanks’ sister gave an update on the actor’s condition after he and his wife, Rita Wilson, tested positive for the novel coronavirus.
Germany is following other major European countries in broadly shutting down public life to stem the spread of the coronavirus. On Monday, Germany imposed temporary controls on its borders with France, Switzerland, Austria, Denmark and Luxembourg and several German states have tightened restrictions on public gatherings.
Manchester City could ask Uefa for a delay to their European ban if the coronavirus crisis interferes with their appeal against it.
TUI has cancelled thousands of holidays to a raft of destinations due to the coronavirus outbreak.
MILAN — Beleaguered Italians may have found a temporary antidote to their shattered spirits that won’t infringe on the country’s strict anti-coronavirus measures: a nationwide “Sound Flashmob.”One day after the country’s death toll from the COVID-19 virus passed 1,000 — second only to China in severity — organizers urged Italians to “open the windows, step out onto the balcony and play together, even from a distance. Let’s cheer up the cities!”At 6 p.m.
MILAN — Beleaguered Italians may have found a temporary antidote to their shattered spirits that won’t infringe on the country’s strict anti-coronavirus measures: a nationwide “Sound Flashmob.”One day after the country’s death toll from the COVID-19 virus passed 1,000 — second only to China in severity — organizers urged Italians to “open the windows, step out onto the balcony and play together, even from a distance. Let’s cheer up the cities!”At 6 p.m.
Luca Franzese is calling out the Italian government in a cry for help.