Word: tune
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...songs rock from start to finish. The best track, “Supernatural Superserious,” sounds like a lost ’90s classic. Despite its dopey title, the verses’ chiming guitar refrain and the infectious chorus make it the catchiest, most ecstatic tune R.E.M. has produced in the last decade. The album’s primary challenge is overcoming a sense of incompleteness. Many of the songs midway through the record suffer from a strong chorus with weak verses, or vice versa. “Hollow Man,” for instance, initially sounds like...
...have been spent mostly crossing t’s and dotting i’s,” Gordon said. “We wanted to use this document as a reference for the future cooperation agreements, so we wanted to make sure that we had time to fine-tune the document.” In September, the University plans to submit an institutional master plan that will outline development plans for the next 50 years. A community benefits plan will need to accompany this document. Harvard Allston Task Force member Harry Mattison said that he was disappointed with...
...Dark Leaves Form a Thread,” the most immediately catchy song on the album, sounds like a ragged collaboration of Guided By Voices and New Order. The crashing drums and singing guitar build until Bejar shouts the triumphant title line, then the synths kick in and the tune floats gloriously thereafter. His declarations are typically bizarre (“So, should you still want me / You can find me down at the café / A little bit too busy being served / Sworn enemy of the waitresses there”) but here it works, lending a darker edge...
...book is written for your twenty-something sports bar regular who thinks his love of sports is a reflection of his masculinity. While this is the stereotypical picture of a sports fan, we all know that it is actually only a small subsection of the millions who tune in every Sunday afternoon and Monday night. From the start, Leitch’s oversight of the thousands of sports fans who don’t fit this pigeonholing description alienates readers like me. Perhaps unsurprisingly, Leitch addresses this audience in a hopelessly juvenile style. The jokes are lame, the asides irrelevant...
...that he thought it no surprise that both of the Democratic presidential candidates beat McCain in the poll. “Obama is defined as the candidate of the future and a representative of the younger generation,” Zafran said. “He is more in tune with student opinion today, which is why he would consider controlling the cost of higher education as a higher priority.” But Harvard Republican Club President Caleb L. Weatherl ’10 said he disagreed with the survey’s results regarding Obama...