Word: vocalized
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...speaker. Involuntarily, I found myself grooving to the music, and I soon saw I wasn’t alone. Jumping, jiving and thrashing about with genuine, inspired abandon, Nullset frontman Ken Smith led the band in a musically cathartic scream of rage that seemed to tear out his vocal cords. Honest to God, I could feel my blood bouncing and internal organs being rearranged by the raw power in “Smokewood,” and I loved every second of it. I sat in wonder, both shaken and stirred by the wonderful sound of indie rock vibrating...
...spellbound by Sweet Honey in the Rock. The sight of the black female a cappella singers dancing beneath the statues of the dead naked white men from long ago that decorate the hall highlighted the power and immediacy of Sweet Honey. When Ysaye Barnwell used her effortless, supernatural vocal range to begin the “Chant” that comes from the South American rainforest, I got goosebumps. When she then made the entire hall sing it in parts, my hair stood on end. It is the magic of Sweet Honey that can turn an audience that would otherwise...
...issue of the living wage protesters inside Mass. Hall was not raised publicly during the two-hour luncheon, which focused on issues facing higher education, but Kennedy, who has been a vocal supporter of the living wage campaign, broached the topic with Rudenstine during a private conversation...
...community’s support for a living wage, and for the sit-in, has been truly overwhelming, and witnessing it grow has been a moving experience. Equally overwhelming has been the lack of vocal opposition. Literally a handful of students have spoken against the sit-in outside the building or in the pages of The Crimson, and after speaking with us or attending public events, several have changed their minds. The lack of vocal opposition has highlighted the isolation of the University administration as it opposes a living wage. The administration’s isolation is also seen...
...trade as a weapon of retaliation. That's a disappointment to one audience the remarks were supposed to mollify: conservative anti-China hard-liners in the G.O.P., who had been publicly silent for the most part during the crisis but who were threatening to grow more vocal. Bush has still other options. Among them: canceling a planned visit to China in October, or trying to block Beijing's bid for the 2008 Olympic Games. And though some anti-China folks in the White House were eagerly chatting up plans for a revenge move last week, it is likely that Bush...