Word: singings
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Orrell played with the band on the 2001 release Sing Loud, Sing Proud, the album that established their dominance over the punk scene. It included standout tracks such as the single “Good Rats,” featuring Shane MacGowan of the legendary Irish rock band The Pogues, and “For Boston,” a rendition of a Boston College fight song...
...TRIUMPHALE DIAMANTE! The Harvard University Choral Fellows teams up with the Boston Camerata to sing Music for Ferrara, 1400-1500. Audience members will be granted a chance to hear twelve of the best singers on campus—whom you may have seen scrambling off to sing in Memorial Church early on weekday mornings—with a group of the best singers in the world. Sean Gallagher, assistant professor of music, will deliver a pre-concert lecture at 7 p.m., for the musicologically-inclined. Tickets are $20-$40; students receive a $10 discount. Friday, March...
...potential revival of the Hollywood musical is upon us with Chicago—for better or worse. Ignoring its politicized ramifications as a genre revival, Chicago on its own is a pretty wild ride, showcasing once and for all that the new school of glitzy film stars can sing better than Jennifer Lopez. Catherine Zeta-Jones, Renee Zellweger, and especially John C. Reilly are surprisingly watchable in this furiously edited, expensive adaptation of the murderous Broadway classic. Chicago screens...
When Lynch begins to sing, her voice is ethereal yet clear and projects deep into the hall. Her arias are the opera’s highlights. Their notes ring like chimes in all ranges, yet the sound is full and well-rounded, even in top notes. The orchestra tends to get carried away on occasion, playing the swelling crescendos with slightly too much crescendo for the acoustic environment and for the singers who must resound above it. Lynch’s voice, however, always resounds fully above the orchestra...
...skim milk of first-year housing. Apley’s shell sconces over the water fountains, oaken moldings straight out of Architectural Digest and fireplaces worthy of an English country inn place it more than a few notches above Canaday. Jackson’s also quick to sing the praises of the “really, really tall doorways” and her room’s extraordinary pedigree—T.S. Eliot ’09 once lived here. As well as the fellow freshmen who occasionally arrive just to behold the room’s legendary beauty...