Word: songfulness
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...office or through Ticketmaster. $15. (PRC)Clandestino: Rock In Spanish Dance Party. The event will feature Lucybell, a noted, fiery Latin-American band. T.T. the Bear’s Place. 9 p.m. $12. (KF)Saturday, Nov. 19Jim Carroll and The Catholic Boys. Poet-turned-punk Jim Carroll, whose song “People Who Died” can be heard during the opening scene of “E.T.,” arrives in Cambridge with The Catholic Boys for their 25th Anniversary Tour, presented by WFNX and The Middle East. The Middle East Downstairs. 8 p.m. 18+. Tickets available...
Some of Flynn’s favorite films from this season include “Song for a Wagging Boy,” which he describes as an “emotional wringer,” as well as “Adam and Paul,” which he calls “very funny but, in the end, tragic...
...skits. For those looking for a comedy show with the extra editing capabilities only film can afford, “Jesus is Magic” is a worthy expenditure. No stage can accommodate a ’60s-themed music video—in which Silverman parodies through song every racial stereotype, only to find herself standing awkwardly in front of one of the targeted parties—and then jump to a skit of Silverman attacking her manager for failing to bring her Fiji water. The film allows Silverman to highlight both her extemporaneous stand-up routines...
...Crimson Arts wants to catch you with your musical pants (be they tight leather or parachute) down. This week, we sat down Leverett student Maurice S. Chen ’06, set his iPod nano on shuffle, and asked him to dish on the first five songs to pop up. The results were…eclectic. 1. Bebel Gilberto - “So Nice (Summer Samba remixed by Mario Caldato Jr.)”: Damn, thank goodness this song came up first…I love this song. It’s so chill. 2. Ken Oak Band...
...strengths only brought the Super Furry Animals’ weaknesses into sharper contrast. The group sounded flat and uninterested, a problem exacerbated by the choice of material, with several tracks from their recent sub-par LP “Love Kraft.” The opening salvo of songs all blended together into a morass of undistinguished low-key Beach Boys homage. The Furries’ trademark has always been their eccentricities, but here the music seemed positively average, and the quirky presentation came across as more silly than innovative. While their previously preferred mode of entrance was an honest...