Word: stonesã
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...horn, I liked classical music and classical music only; indeed, the idea of someone, or specifically my entire seventh grade class, who preferred Green Day to the lilting “Swan Lake,” appalled me. Little did I then know that one day the Rolling Stones?? insistent strumming guitars would seem to echo my heartbeat, or that I would find as much poetry in Lou Reed’s tired voice as in a Mahler symphony. Since arriving at Harvard, and I now suppose throughout my life, music has provided a constancy and sincerity which...
...Dean of the College Harry R. Lewis `68: a copy of the Rolling Stones?? “Hot Rocks” CD ($15.99). Did this man really go to college in the ’60s? If he refuses this gift we’ll know the true answer...
...elegiac “Sylvia Plath.” Since Gold tends toward heavy production quality that is sometimes at odds with Adams’ rough-grained vocals, the solo live versions of these songs were refreshingly honest and vital. Adams also played an imaginative cover of the Rolling Stones?? “Brown Sugar,” and finished the set with a sedate “Come Pick Me Up.” It was all the crowd could do to keep from singing along, but anything that might have obscured Adams’ magical voice...
...artists began to acquire a large fan base. The Village People topped the charts with songs that band member David Hodo described as, “the worst you have ever heard;” Devo produced a skeletal reproduction of pop culture reference point, the Rolling Stones?? “Satisfaction,” while Madonna freely admitted that she was a “material girl.” Even ivory-tower electronic music became a public commodity as New Order and Soft Cell produced dance club hits...
...easy to denounce, to find fault, to make unjust accusations—even to light fires and throw stones??for personal relief or for exploitation,” he said in his penultimate Baccalaureate speech...