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...talent on display. "From the Edge of the Deep Green Sea" was wound up and presented with the beautiful interplay between Gallup's bass guitar and the guitars of Smith and Perry Bamonte. Smith held the song down with delicate guitar picking and clever use of his effects pedal while Bamonte threw in some violently untamed guitar solos. On this song, as he did throughout the night, Gallup alternated perfectly between powerful riffs and steady subdued bass lines...

Author: By Sumeet Garg, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: The Cure for the Common Show | 12/5/1997 | See Source »

Though "Bach-Pratt" may never achieve the hyphenated ubiquity of "Bach-Busoni," the pianist's realization of the organ music was good, particularly in the translation of pedal points and high-register fireworks. In the Passacaglia, his loud, turbo righthand octaves were sensational, though there seemed to be some rhythmic slipping and sliding. The first fugal episode was marvelous, and it was interesting to consider just how well the Hall worked as church space. Sometimes the texture of the fugue became too dense or blurred for comprehension, but the forceful, toccata-style ending was astonishingly clear...

Author: By Matthew A. Carter, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Amazin' Awadagin Hits Boston | 11/21/1997 | See Source »

...acrobatics are replaced by percolating, rock-steady lines. The band seems to find one voice, and in tracks stretching up to 30 minutes long, the musicians lay into one repetitive groove after another with a vengeance. Miles, in the center of it all as always, works the wah-wah pedal relentlessly, giving his horn even more human qualities...

Author: By Josiah J. Madigan, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Kind of Blue And Very Live | 10/10/1997 | See Source »

...beauty of the Jaipur foot is its lightness and mobility--those who wear it can run, climb trees and pedal bicycles--and its low price. While a prosthesis for a similar level of amputation can cost several thousand dollars in the U.S., the Jaipur foot costs only $28 in India. Sublimely low-tech, it is made of rubber (mostly), wood and aluminum and can be assembled with local materials. In Afghanistan craftsmen hammer the foot together out of spent artillery shells. In Cambodia, where roughly 1 out of every 380 people is a war amputee, part of the foot...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE $28 FOOT | 10/1/1997 | See Source »

Three members of the Class of '98 will ring Lowell House's bells tomorrow morning. According to bell-ringer Luis A. Campos '98, more than a dozen hand pulls and a foot pedal control the bells...

Author: By Barbara E. Martinez, | Title: Bell-Ringing Will Herald 346th Commencement | 6/5/1997 | See Source »

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