Word: snared
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...bands that lack extravagant individual virtuosos have to be. The band showcased their best qualities, namely Daniel’s likeable vocal approach and on the alternating use of slow climax and simple backbeats (although he had a full kit, Eno could have done the same job with just snare, bass, and hi-hat). Sometimes sounding like art-pop legends 10cc covering Prince, and other times sounding completely themselves, Spoon delivered all the fun their fad-clad audience could’ve hoped for. Doing as much as Modest Mouse and others to blur the lines between what is respectably...
...Hagan lobbed the ball high up to Widman in the back of the endzone where the 6’2 senior reached above his defender to pull in his third touchdown of the season.Widman displayed surprising acrobatic ability on his second catch, stretching out horizontally to snare an 18-yard pass from O’Hagan.“We have a lot of offensive weapons,” Widman said. “I’m doing everything I can do to complement those guys, trying to get open any way I can.”Widman?...
...Hagan lobbed the ball high up to Widman in the back of the endzone where the 6’2 senior reached above his defender to pull in his third touchdown of the season.Widman displayed surprising acrobatic ability on his second catch, stretching out horizontal to snare an 18-yard pass from O’Hagan.“We have a lot of offensive weapons,” Widman said. “I’m doing everything I can do to complement those guys, trying to get open any way I can.”Widman?...
Melodically speaking, the song is average pop-country fare: the acoustic guitar is nice and twangy, there’s the requisite solo fiddle wailing in the background, and the snare drum is mixed nice and loud. The track really would have benefited from a stronger bassline, however—as “Give a Damn,” unlike Messina herself, really doesn’t have much of a bottom...
...also testament to the massive medical advances of the past 300 years. The Silver and Steel Gallery juxtaposes clunky antique surgical tools with the sleek instruments used in operating theaters today. Be grateful that the 18th century skull-trepanning brace-and-bit and the brutal mid-19th century "tumor snare" are safely relegated to a blood-spattered past. tel: (44-20) 7869 6560; www.rcseng.ac.uk/services/museums