Students unwrap a year of diverse Spotify listening
It’s that time of year again.
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It’s that time of year again.
On Wednesday, a room nestled near the back of Flyleaf Books was bustling with anticipation for a night of guitar, vocals and conversation.
The UNC Symphony Orchestra will be hosting their second concert of the 2023-24 season at Memorial Hall with two contrasting pieces — one a classical staple and the other a new, engaging piece from a UNC professor.
I’m obsessed with Reneé Rapp.
On Nov. 2, the Beatles released a new song, six decades after their first album debuted. “Now and Then,” an originally unfinished demo recorded by John Lennon in the late 1970s, became a full-fledged track in the Beatles’ discography thanks to machine learning. That’s right — artificial intelligence just became the fifth member of the Beatles.
I’ve long had a grudging respect for Taylor Swift. After all, few of the artists who were massive stars when I was in first grade are still, 13 years later, releasing popular albums and going on culture-defining tours.
Inside the Carrboro Century Center on Sunday, community members and music buffs alike browsed through containers spread across 42 display tables, featuring music ranging from 1950s R&B to Psychedelic Rock and New Wave music.
For UNC music and biology major Cameron Davis, opera is all about expressiveness and exaggeration.
Almost a decade has passed since Taylor Swift reinvented herself as a pop artist with the release of her 2014 album, "1989." Now, the re-recording of the album adds to the story with new takes on the originals and five new vault tracks.
Content Warning: This article contains mentions of sexual assault.
Cat’s Cradle surged with rock 'n’ roll energy as School of Rock Chapel Hill students performed Taylor Swift’s “You Belong With Me” under colorful stage lights while attendees jumped around at the school's annual Halloween Spooktacular Mid-Season Preview Show on Sunday.
Third-year public policy student Nerrissa Crawford said she grew up in a musically-inclined family — her cousin is a Grammy-winning music producer, and her mother is a master of ceremonies, an emcee. Her passion for music led her to UNC's Albums and Record Society as a first-year. Now, she is the organization's president.
At the end of several long, winding roads, with an ideal view of the fall foliage, sits Down Yonder Farm in Hillsborough. On Saturday, this was the setting for Sleepy Fest, a music festival organized by Carrboro's local record label, Sleepy Cat Records.
Anne-Claire Cleaver, a local singer-songwriter, was once one of more than 100 million Americans struggling with medical debt.
In 1995, a group of UNC students formed a funky alt-rock band called Anna to the Infinite Power.
Surrounded by the whispers of students and cafe patrons, the gentle yet uplifting sounds of a harp guitar accompanied the relaxed atmosphere at Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews last Friday.
“I have a favor to ask you: will you put your phones away?” Phoebe Bridgers of supergroup Boygenius asked her fans before she sang the ballad “Letter to an Old Poet” this past Sunday. She’s been asking this of fans since the group's summer tour.
Venues, sidewalks and streets overflowed with audiences on Sunday for the 26th annual Carrboro Music Festival, which showcased diverse, local acts at 18 locations across town.
An hour before doors opened for Mipso’s last show in North Carolina, the members of the folk-Americana quartet were on the floor of Raleigh’s Lincoln Theatre, surrounded by a small group of fans.
Lillian Hawkins, a senior at UNC, smiles every time she thinks about her music students’ end-of-semester performances and the family members, mentors and other students who come together to listen.