Music
At the End of the Shining Path
Wildly experimental, their music synthesized—through entropy, violence, parody, and a half-ironic sense of the divine.
Boston Conservatory Orchestra at Sanders
Bruce Hangen conducts the Boston Conservatory Orchestra in a performance of Debussy’s “Iberia” in Sanders Theater, Memorial Hall on Sunday afternoon.
Boston Conservatory Orchestra at Sanders
Bruce Hangen conducts the Boston Conservatory Orchestra in a performance of Debussy’s “Iberia” in Sanders Theater, Memorial Hall on Sunday afternoon.
Today in Photos (10/04/10)
A collection of photos published in the October 4, 2010 edition of the Harvard Crimson.
Liza’s Confessions Are a Little Too Sweet
Despite Minnelli’s and Stritch’s mastery in voice and piano, “Confessions” suffers from its lovesick melancholy.
Feminism: Lady Gaga and Beyonce
Daphne Brooks, a Professor of English at Princeton University and a Radcliffe Fellow, lead a discussion on the new faces of feminism surrounding pop icons Lady Gaga and Beyonce.
Margot & the Nuclear So and So’s Hit Growing Pains
“Buzzard” sounds like an unsatisfying middle ground between the Margot of old and their new approach.
Shit Robot Best Heard Drunk and in the Dark
“From the Cradle to the Rave,” just doesn’t hold up quite as well to close attention and well-lit room.
Not Much to Feel with “Hands All Over”
Bogged down by predictability, their newest LP fails to live up to its name.
Showing Off
Originally, Sugarman and Rosenbaum imagined the Showcase as an event for singers, but they were then inspired to include artists from other disciplines. “Ideally we would love this to be something that all artists on campus would go to,” Rosenbaum says.
Gamelan, Making Music in Hilles
Did you love banging on pots and pans as a child? Have an urge to catch the vibe of resonating gongs, melodious chimes, or reverberating drums? Then you need to check out Gamelan—a type of Indonesian music being offered on campus with artist-in-residence Jody Diamond.
Bicycles Mobilized as Art in Annual International Festival
Cars and pedestrians may still dominate the hectic streets of Harvard Square, but it’s the bicycle that will have the right of way at the Boston Bicycle Film Festival (BFF).
Clark Foresees Noteworthy Year Ahead
Professor Andrew G. Clark had a busy weekend. The new Director of Choral Activities was tasked with leading more than ...
‘A Thousand Suns’ Gleams With Vision and Tension
Linkin Park explores a multitude of loosely connected ideas of doomsday and what it means—everything from love to religious justice to political fury to a vague story of nuclear war.