Electroacoustic music returns to its Dartmouth roots
This weekend's SEAMUS festival promises to be an exploration of one of the world's newest musical forms
This weekend's SEAMUS festival promises to be an exploration of one of the world's newest musical forms
The quintet brings their sexy take on Baroque music to Hop
The mind behind 'The Tune' and other films brings his latest
Former members of the Jazz Messengers reunite to honor Art Blakey, the man who jump-started their careers
The Emerson String Quartet, 1998 Grammy winner for best chamber music, has won 20 years worth of accolades
With photographs of New York's Chinatown
The one term old singing group chooses to avoid pop music and sing music intended for a cappella singers
'A Stranger in the Kingdom' has great locales, poor story
Gary Oldman really is lost in space. This amazingly gifted actor has apparently decided to stop reading scripts altogether before signing on to projects and in the process has put his loyal fans (including me) in a bind.
The Pinkas-Hirsch duo brings George Rochberg's work to life
The Hanover music scene comes alive this weekend with the New Zealand band Garageland playing on campus Saturday and the Promise Rings on Sunday. The New Zealand quartet began three years ago, when classmates Jeremy Eade (guitar/vocals), Mark Silvey (bass) and Andrew Gladstone (drums) came together for jam sessions that soon grew into something bigger. Taking their name from the early Clash anthem "Garageland," the band recruited Silvey's sister Debbie (guitar) to expand their sound and then proceeded to record a demo.
Last night's Steve Miller Band concert in Leede Arena was the best of the year. Period. Miller and his five-member band proved that they can still rock and roll as they played to a mixed crowd of college students, bikers, high school students and middle-aged adults who were trying to relive their past. "Guitar," as he is referred to, came out immediately and responded to yesterday's preview article in The Dartmouth. "Don't you worry, we are going to play all those songs and more tonight," he said. He opened up with several ballads including "Country Girl" and "Goin' to the Country," but the crowd was waiting for him to break into something to which they could sing along. They received their wish when the band played "Dance, Dance, Dance" which included a beautiful trio between Miller, his pianist and Norton Buffalo on the harmonica. The crowd was jumping by that point but when they immediately launched into "Swingtown," the atmosphere was upgraded to absolutely electric. Miller and his band are on the sixth date on their Space Cowboy tour in between their stops in New York and Boston. "Living in the USA," in the words of one onlooker, was "nasty." The guitar rifts were wonderful and the harmonies were still sound after all these years. After a 15-minute intermission, Miller returned to his roots and played three blues tunes which is how he began his career. They returned back to some of their more popular songs with very upbeat renditions of "Abracadabra" and "Serenade." It became glaringly apparent that the lyrics "Abracadabra, I wanna reach out and grab ya" are just about the best that he ever wrote. Miller and the other five closed the second half of the concert with the geographically witty "Rock 'N Me" and the wind machine-filled "Jet Airliner." Even though they are in thirtieth year together, they looked fresh enough to be in their first, and all of the true Miller fans in the audience knew what would follow in the band's encore. "Take the Money and Run" was as fast as ever performed, yet still technically sound.
The Pulitzer Prize winning auther and Oprah mentor continues her successful career as a novelist
The Steve Miller Band comes to Leede tonight with more classic rock hits than one can count, but we'll try
AudiNet provides access to music and sports broadcasts from across the country
Susan Marshall and Company's 'The Most Dangerous Room in the House' is more odd than beautiful
NBC News' ubiquitous news magazine show combines high-tech graphics with low-quality journalism
This term's series features films that found their inspiration--and funding--outside of the Hollywood system
Leno or Letterman? A few years ago, this was the pertinent question facing the followers of the late-night talk show war.
Neve Campbell sheds her 'Party of Five' to play a high school nymphette trying to con her guidance counselor