'A musical safari’: Verona Quartet collaborates with local musicians for performance
The Verona Quartet will be bringing an animalistic musical flair to UNC’s campus.
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The Verona Quartet will be bringing an animalistic musical flair to UNC’s campus.
Some say laughter is the best medicine. Thoai Vu, founder of Heeling in Harmony, might disagree.
If you're reading this on Oct. 22, my graduation day is in exactly 54 days. If you're reading this on Dec. 16, I'm probably sitting at home, watching reruns of North Carolina men's basketball games on YouTube, wiping my tears on my oversized UNC School of Media and Journalism T-shirt.
I used to think Broadway musicals were for stuffy old people. I thought the only ones that existed were the classics that everyone has at least heard of — "Wicked," "The Sound of Music," "Les Misérables."
This Saturday, Oct. 5, the Eno River Association (ERA) will be hosting its third JamborEno festival at the Eno Confluence in Hillsborough.
The Carolina Symposia in Music and Culture series is starting with a “bounce” on Oct. 4 with the first lecture by professor Lauron Kehrer of Western Michigan University titled, "'Nice for What': New Orleans Bounce and Disembodied Queer Voices in the Mainstream.”
My introduction to the word “punk” started with my mom, who used the term to describe kids who seemed like they were up to no good. The definition was later expanded when I caught reruns of Ashton Kutcher’s hit reality show, “Punk’d.” As it turned out, punk could also mean hilariously pranking celebrities on tape.
I had a real problem making this playlist — what, exactly, is a Beatles deep cut?
The casual music listener often thinks of jazz as academic music. Dense, technical and often based on complex harmonic and rhythmic concepts, it may feel impenetrable without a degree in music theory. But with "MUSC 145: Introduction to Jazz," UNC professor Stephen Anderson is looking to bring jazz to the typical student — and with it, a greater appreciation for music as a whole.
It takes a lot of guts to ask someone to check out your SoundCloud with full belief that they won't think your music is trash. Michael Spragley did exactly that last week on the eighth floor of Davis Library.
I resisted the urge to use my Office DJ to promote every Jonas Brothers song ever produced, that I may or may not already have as my most used Spotify playlist.
Mangoose is an unconventional band with an experimental, diverse sound within the UNC music community. Inspired by a variety of different influences, they use their musical improvisation skills to excite crowds in a range of different venues, from big fraternity parties to professional settings, such as the Cat’s Cradle back room.
NEW YORK – A search. A click. An email.
Psychedelic rock: a makeshift genre that escapes the clutches of normality. Band members of Local Flora associate their sound as psychedelic rock not as a rigid genre but as a culmination of “funky bass,” “groove” and “weird vibes” to coalesce a unique sound that captures the fun-loving energy they both draw from and return to the community.
Rap music gave way to a somber silence as students gathered on Wednesday night in the Pit to hold a vigil mourning the death of rapper Nipsey Hussle.
Treat yourself to tunes of the town this spring, when a variety of musical genres will be played in music venues across the Triangle area. From Southern folk to sludge metal, enjoy special and unique sounds that are only a hop, skip and a jump away.
Few can understand the tribulations of undergoing multiple open-heart surgeries, overcoming a battle with mental health issues or becoming an outstanding musician and recording artist. And few can say they have faced all at the same time. But local violinist David Binanay can.
How do you breathe fresh life into a 30-year-old anime classic? To hear Micah Moses tell it, it’s all in the music.
Atlanta rapper 6LACK will perform at the 2019 spring Jubilee concert, the Carolina Union Activities Board announced Friday. The concert will be on April 13.
Get a taste of "Pitch Perfect" with this year’s A Cappella Jam on March 1. Attendees will see performances by eight of the a cappella groups on campus— including the UNC Loreleis, Tar Heel Voices, the Achordants, Cadence, the Clef Hangers, Walk Ons and the Tarpeggios — as they perform to raise money for Carolina for the Kids.