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Word: harped (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...modern plumbing. They hate cars, airplanes, consumer markets and anything else that is a product of modern society. Second, MOVE is not proto-typically radical. They hate capitalism, but they also hate socialist governments that also believe in the worth of science and industry. They only incidentally harp about class conflict and proletarian oppression. Third, the group is revolutionary. Although they despise cities, they feel a moral obligation to stay in the urban centers and fight what they construe to be the enemy. MOVE members say they will eventually head for the halcyon hills, but only after...

Author: By J. WYATT Emmerich, | Title: Summer in the City | 9/21/1978 | See Source »

...thing that made Black and Blue such a cloyingly poppy album. Do not be misled by the games Jagger and Richard play. "Miss You" does indeed have a discoid beat, and Jagger does indeed sing like an Ohio Player (and some guy named Sugar Blue plays as classy a harp as you've ever heard), but "Miss You" is not much like the rest of the album at all. This is not to downgrade "Miss You" beyond reason. It is technically an excellent song led by Bill Wyman's trendy bass work and Charlie Watt's as ever tight drumming...

Author: By Joseph B. White, | Title: Stones Roll Again | 6/26/1978 | See Source »

...centerpiece of side one is, of course, the title track 'Some Girls.' Sugar Blue's magnificent harp gives way to Jagger's ironic and at times obscene catalogue of women. His stance is that of a complete misogynist defending his case. In an interview with Jonathan Cott in Rolling Stone, Jagger insisted that "Some Girls" is a joke and not a statement of anti-feminism. It's hard to read anything else but anti-feminism into a line like, "some girls take the shirt off my back and leave me with a lethal dose," but it's also hard...

Author: By Joseph B. White, | Title: Stones Roll Again | 6/26/1978 | See Source »

...trying to work my way into heaven," Judith Kogan says of her desire to become a professional harp player...

Author: By Maxwell Gould. and Compiled ROBERT O. boorstin, S | Title: Plastics Ain't For Every Body | 6/8/1978 | See Source »

...Harp playing may not help Kogan into heaven but it has already earned her a Rotary scholarship to study in the Royal Academy of Music in London next year. From London, the music major will cross the continent to spend part of the spring and summer in the Soviet Union on a Radcliffe fellowship--she hopes to study in the Moscow Conservatory--before returning to the United States to continue harp studies at Julliard in New York City...

Author: By Maxwell Gould. and Compiled ROBERT O. boorstin, S | Title: Plastics Ain't For Every Body | 6/8/1978 | See Source »

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