UNC alumni reunite in band 'Megayacht'
In 1995, a group of UNC students formed a funky alt-rock band called Anna to the Infinite Power.
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In 1995, a group of UNC students formed a funky alt-rock band called Anna to the Infinite Power.
Surrounded by the whispers of students and cafe patrons, the gentle yet uplifting sounds of a harp guitar accompanied the relaxed atmosphere at Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews last Friday.
“Ser Plantas," or “being plants," is the focus of the 38th North Carolina Latin American Film Festival, whose films explore the current ecological issues confronting migrant and Indigenous peoples of Latin America.
Dey Hall was filled with students and music on Wednesday evening for “Spoonfuls of Art," an event hosted by the UNC Russian Flagship Program.
As community members walk by Hanes Art Center, their eyes might gravitate toward the large black and white drawings printed on the walls of the John and June Allcott Gallery.
Venues, sidewalks and streets overflowed with audiences on Sunday for the 26th annual Carrboro Music Festival, which showcased diverse, local acts at 18 locations across town.
An hour before doors opened for Mipso’s last show in North Carolina, the members of the folk-Americana quartet were on the floor of Raleigh’s Lincoln Theatre, surrounded by a small group of fans.
Lillian Hawkins, a senior at UNC, smiles every time she thinks about her music students’ end-of-semester performances and the family members, mentors and other students who come together to listen.
Zines evade strict definitions. They are journals with stapled and glued ephemera. They are digital collages. They are small poetry anthologies and folded pieces of paper full of doodles.
Every theater production at PlayMakers Repertory Company requires some sort of costuming. Whether readymade clothes need to be altered or new costumes need to be created from scratch, the students of UNC's Master of Fine Arts in Costume Production oversee each button and thread.
Local artists from a wide variety of genres will be traveling to town this upcoming weekend for the 26th annual Carrboro Music Festival.
On Sept. 19, UNC junior Victoria Wlosok was busy celebrating the release of her debut novel, young adult sapphic thriller "How to Find a Missing Girl."
The Chelsea Theater stands as the home of arthouse cinema in Chapel Hill. The old-fashioned picture-house is a bastion of classic Hollywood and foreign films — but the theater is by no means stuck in the past.
In April, cartoonist Max Huffman's monthly rent increased from $800 to $1,400 when the Carrboro apartment building he had lived in for three years changed ownership.
French language graduate teaching fellow Alex Goldych still remembers the first time she watched a French film in high school.
The Ackland Film Forum is bringing a diverse and intriguing selection of nineties throwback films to the big screen this fall, with free admission to the public and campus life experience credit for UNC students.
For a brief, enchanted moment on Sunday, visitors to the Ackland Art Museum were transported into the visual and auditory world of a French noble of the late 18th century.
Rain forced the UNC Jazz Faculty Concert indoors, but there was still a packed house in Moeser Auditorium on Sept. 12. The energy in the audience and among the performers was palpable, with people of all ages erupting into applause after every song.
In bold, neon pink letters against the dim, blue stage lights, a sign reads “Clyde’s” — a reference to both the titular diner on stage and the title of the PlayMakers Repertory Company’s current show.
As long as the ladder was not too hot to touch, she was painting.