Word: capellas
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Saturday’s a capella concert featuring The LowKeys and The Din & Tonics proved what so many already knew: everybody loves “Stacey’s Mom.” The LowKeys took the stage first with their customarily elegant clothing adding an intriguing level to their focus on contemporary pop-songs. Although each song in the Lowkeys’ repertoire, including “I’ll Be” by Pearl Jam, was well rehearsed and impeccably sung, it was the solos that enraptured the audience. One highlight was Meghan C. Joyce...
...with the music of pianist Bob Levin. Paine Hall. 8 p.m. Tickets available at the Harvard Box Office, (617) 496-2222, free with a limit of two tickets per person. (LAM)Saturday, Nov. 5Dins & LowKeys Concert. Check out the fall concert festivities at Keylime, where the two Harvard a capella groups will jam for the night. Sanders Theatre. 8 p.m. Tickets available at the Harvard Box Office, (617) 496-2222, $12 general, $8 students. (LAM)Brattle Street Chamber Players Concert. The 14-member string group performs “To My Grandfather,” an original commissioned work...
...product of a single group—leaving at most $2,500 to be matched, Associate Dean of the College Judith H. Kidd wrote in an e-mail yesterday. Seven victims of Hurricane Katrina, who have been living at nearby Air Force Base Camp Otis, watched a capella groups like the Harvard-Radcliffe Veritones and dancers from TAPS, among others, perform in Sanders Theatre to raise money to rebuild their home. The seven evacuees had been bused to Harvard through the Phillips Brooks House Association, where they attended a reception with student leaders and University administrators before the concert. Kuumba...
...rock band composed of Harvard College students Justin Hurwitz ’07 (keyboards), Fuj Judge ’07 (bass guitar), Damien Chazelle ’07 (drums), Wallach and Drummey— promise that their live show this Friday, following the performance of the a capella group, the Harvard Din & Tonics, “will be bananas...
According to Wallach, the group was asked to perform with the seeminglydissimilar Harvard musical group, the Din & Tonics, because watching two successive a capella group performances can become tiring. “We were invited to perform after the Din & Tonics in order to mix things up a bit,” he offers...