Word: pop
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...OperaDudley House, Lehman Hall1:30 p.m.Harvard-Radcliffe VeritonesScience Center C1:30 p.m.Music for Four FlutesHolden Chapel1:30 p.m.L’homme ArmeAdolphus Busch Hall, 29 Kirkland St1:30 p.m.“Fell in Love with a Dead Boy”Carpenter Center, 24 Quincy St1:30 p.m.Harvard Pops OrchestraSanders Theatre1:30 p.m. Mariachi Veritas de HarvardHarvard Yard Stage1:30 p.m. Quatre MainesPaine Hall1:30 p.m.Marin Marais: Music for 3 ViolsMemorial Church1:30 p.m.Chart Toppers UnpluggedCambridge Queen’s Head1:30 p.m.Brass Ensemble PerformancePhillips Brooks House1:30 p.m.Dance FestivalLowell Lecture Hall1: 45 p.m.Japanese Tea CeremonyTearoom2 p.m.The Tragedy...
Despite their label as a cover band, the group slated to perform as the Rod Stewart Tribute Band during Arts First weekend has a surprisingly varied catalogue. Over the last few weeks, they’ve perfected a repertoire of pop hits—ranging from Rod Stewart’s “Do Ya Think I’m Sexy” to the Dire Straits’ “Walk of Life” and Prince’s “Erotic City”— to be performed tomorrow at their multimedia...
Camera Obscura is an indie pop band. Camerata Obscura is what an indie pop band might have been like back in the Renaissance. “A lot of small playing groups call themselves camerata,” explains Anna H. de Bakker ’10, who sings the alto part in the vocal ensemble, “and we were making a pun.” The program that Camerata Obscura will be presenting on Saturday May 2 at 2:30 at Adolphus Busch Hall, titled “Music of Lament,” showcases music?...
...believes that concerns over difficulty also lead people to overlook the lighthearted element in his work, which frequently incorporates parody, quotes, and pop culture for a collage-like effect. “I think I’m a rather funny person,” he says. “I like my poems to include as many things in them as possible. Humor, tragedy, love, time, all the things that are traditional in poetry—I like having them happening all at once...
...First show featuring student artwork that uses textiles as a point of inspiration. “Latent/Lubricious (Fabrication Methods)” opens tonight in the Adams Art Space. Lien’s interpretation of textiles and fashion was influenced by critic Theodor Adorno’s views on pop culture as a means of producing commodities. Student artists including Anna J. Murphy ’12, Sabrina Chou ’09, Dana M. Kase ’11, and Amy M. Yoshitsu ’10 have contributed pieces to the exhibition. “I think...