Word: soulfully
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...book-club craze linked to the aging of the American mind? Bart Schneider, who publishes the Minnesota-based Hungry Mind Review, is certain it is. "There's this whole 'soul industry' springing up," he says. "Baby boomers are awakening to the total emptiness of their lives, and reading is something they know is important and haven't quite forgotten how to do. Plus, a book club sure beats church and synagogue." In Los Angeles, traditionally the land of rampant intellectual insecurity and social transience, some book clubs fulfill a crucial dual role: they elevate members' sensibilities while helping them...
DIED. LAURA NYRO, 49, intense and lyrical singer-songwriter whose free-form musical emotionalism captured for many the passions of the 1960s and 1970s; of ovarian cancer; in Danbury, Connecticut. Her unique blend of folk, soul, gospel and Broadway influenced many artists, some of whom turned her tunes into hits. A brief playlist: Wedding Bell Blues (Fifth Dimension), And When I Die (Blood, Sweat and Tears) and Stoney End (Barbra Streisand...
Much of science-fiction/fantasy anime is marked by charming anachronisms, such as people having swordfights in the most technologically advanced armor. Perhaps this is a Japanese attempt to have things both ways--to be technologically advanced but still maintain a soul...
Tenor saxophonist and recording artist Don Braden '85, also a Jazz Band alum, performed three tunes, including an arrangement commissioned by the OFA entitled "Landing Zone" and an arrangement of the Hank Mobley tune "Soul Station." The latter, which will appear on Braden's upcoming release for RCA/Victor entitled The Voice of the Saxophone, was performed by an all-Harvard Jazz Band Alumni 13-person "Octet." Outstanding solos by tenor player Anton Schwartz '89 and trumpet player Bob Merrill '81, as well as uplifting playing by the rhythm section, fully expressed the buoyant yet nostalgic atmosphere which characterized this reunion...
...tenor, he turned to confide with the audience, "The little one gets mad when I pick up the big one!" Jacquet, who was the Kayden Artist in Residence in 1983 at Harvard, performed four tunes with the Band: Jacquet's own "Robbin's Nest," as well as "Body and Soul," "Flyin' Home" and "On the Sunny Side of the Street." This was his eighth visit to Harvard. While Jacquet held the audience in thrall with his simple, warm, lyrical solos, it was the sensitive accompaniment by the entire Monday Jazz Band as well as the solid playing of Jacquet...