Word: singed
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...evening with a solo performance of folk, jazz, and rock. She said in an interview after the show that female musicians face additional challenges. “There’s a lot of pressure as a woman artist—from how you look, to how you sing,” Tuttle said. “As a woman in this industry, it is so important to have a sense of camaraderie with other female artists.” The weekend’s concert was a way of promoting this sense of fellowship and of encouraging women...
...country music. Atypically celebrating the joys of “real love,” Williams excels in getting our hearts pumping and ready for the rest of the exciting tracks on the album. This contrasts with her 2007 release “West,” where she sings primarily of unrequited love and other hardships. In “Honey Bee,” another electrifying track, Williams is no sweetheart; “Now I’ve got your honey all over my tummy,” she sings. Apparently, she is not afraid to show...
...father left in her life. “The Secret Life of Bees” deserves the most applause for the fact that director Gina Prince-Bythewood doesn’t overuse the cast. With such recognizable singer-cum-actresses as Latifah, Hudson, and Keys, I nervously awaited group sing-a-longs (à la Beyoncé in “Dreamgirls”). Thankfully, the audience is never put through this torture. Nor does the movie rely too heavily on Fanning and Bettany, two experienced actors, to convey emotional weight. However, the familiarity of the content and the predictability...
...life is one long fall. Reading the newspaper, Caden sees a headline about a playwright. "Harold Pinter's dead," he muses aloud. "No, wait, he won the Nobel Prize." He glances at the TV and sees his own animated form as part of a cartoon show, accompanied by the sing-song lyrics: "Then he died / Maybe someone cried / But not his ex-bride...
They run, March, curse, fight, sing--and occasionally die--on a cavernous expanse of stage nearly half a football field wide. In their dress-up uniforms, they're an exotic-looking bunch: wearing kilts, playing bagpipes, sporting tam-o'-shanters with a red feather. This Scottish army regiment seems out of place in Iraq, transferred from Basra to bolster U.S. troops bogged down in the "triangle of death" near Baghdad. But their plainspoken, Highland-accented gripes about the war have a familiar ring. "You're no' really doing the job you're trained for," says one soldier...