Word: bandã
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...secure a portable audio system for Harvard’s musicians to access. Hufstedler describes this as the “vital missing piece” of equipment to be found on campus.“Even though that’s maybe not the crutch of a band??s equipment,” she says, “it’s really difficult to get up on stage and perform and that’s the first time you’ve ever heard your vocals.”The core of HCARAR?...
...attention. “Hold Me Down” manages to be neither—just a beautiful song with a beautiful video to match. Straying from your typical emo-pop-punk clip—which normally features a young TV starlet in an interweaving love story with the band??s homely frontman—the video is simply a well-filmed performance. Set in a vast open park with snow-capped mountains as a background, the group bundles up and play their hearts out to match the emotions of the song. In its simplicity, the viewer...
...playing chess, and gazing out the windows. They don’t seem terribly lonely, but they do seem rather bored. Why they thought people would be entertained by watching the band travel by luxury bus is hard to say. As if to compensate for the dullness of the band??s scenes, they alternate with shots of the antithesis of boring: stuff burning. A billboard, some trash, a car, and a bus stop are among the things that are incongruously and computer-generatedly on fire throughout an anonymous city as passers-by go about their...
...Four Suture Stereolab (Too Pure/Beggars) Stereolab is getting old. Not in a fully bad way, but in the way that anything middle-aged becomes a little more predictable and a little less exciting. “Fab Four Suture,” the band??s latest release, culls together a year or so of music, previously released only on vinyl, and packs it into a single album, available, depending on your level of connoisseurship, as a CD, a limited edition double 10”, or a triple 7”. Variety’s great, but the elaborate...
...Cage” Dir. Samuel Bayer A despondent black-and-white video from New York’s kings of hip is both unexpected and disappointing. The abrasive, stuttering, constantly moving camera-work for “Heart in a Cage,” the second single from the band??s third album, “First Impressions of Earth,” places the band in the midst of a cold New York winter. Conjuring up the claustrophobia and bleakness of Manhattan is a new direction for a band whose earlier videos and songs celebrated the grime...