UNC lecturer's fiddle album explores musical realism inspired by literature
Tatiana Hargreaves, a lecturer at UNC, loves “One Hundred Years of Solitude” by Gabriel García Márquez — so much that she based her solo fiddle album on it.
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Tatiana Hargreaves, a lecturer at UNC, loves “One Hundred Years of Solitude” by Gabriel García Márquez — so much that she based her solo fiddle album on it.
The 78th annual Golden Globe Awards, which took place on Sunday, were different from past years in many ways, but for better or for worse, the production made history.
In a time when Zoom meetings are nearly ubiquitous, picking up the phone for a conversation with a stranger may seem like an everyday activity. But in Carolina Performing Arts' current production of theater troupe 600 HIGHWAYMEN’s newest performance, this simple gesture is anything but a typical encounter.
In the early 1900s, Florence Price, a Black female prize-winning composer, struggled to find work and often found herself moving from place to place as a result. Black composers rarely received the same recognition as others, so when UNC students Maria Manning and Ayman Bejjani studied her work, they decided to help bring her work to life through the First Fridays Series.
It’s Spotify's world, and we’re all just living in it.
Showcasing a diverse group of storytellers, The Process Series invites people back into the magical world of storytelling. "Remembrance and Renewal", a storytelling festival that The Process Series is producing along with UNC's Department of American Studies, will be livestreamed from Feb. 17 until Feb. 21.
Performing in a live band during a pandemic might be difficult, but the School of Rock Chapel Hill (SORCH) works to give its students the ability to master their instrument in a fun environment, while adhering to COVID-19 safety standards.
The Ackland Art Museum and the UNC Department of Art and Art History hosted a lecture titled “Sousveillance and How to Think Like a Forest” Monday night as part of the Hanes Visiting Artist Series.
Two years ago, Nick Bafia and Julia Stamey were struck with inspiration after hearing a guest speaker in one of their classes talk about how they attempted to submit an original film they created to the Academy Awards.
Warner Bros.' “Judas and the Black Messiah” will be in theaters on Friday. Without any major spoilers, here’s what audiences can expect:
Carolina Performing Arts' spring calendar includes several familiar faces, this time in pixels. The latest lineup for “CPA at Home,” Carolina Performing Arts’ ongoing virtual solution to social distancing guidelines, was announced on Jan. 27.
There are at least seven deadly sins in queer film. There are more, of which I’m ardently aware. But, for the sake of mnemonics, in this article there are seven.
Audience participation is an important component of actor and playwright Mike Wiley’s work. In Playmakers Repertory Company’s production of “Blood Done Sign My Name,” Wiley performed in front of a live Zoom audience to maintain the interactive nature of the play.
Last week, the infamous trading platform Robinhood closed all purchases made into undervalued companies, most notably GameStop, but included other shares into AMC Entertainment, Nokia and BlackBerry.
The Notebook
Nash Consing was in Belize, working on a documentary project, when the pandemic started to escalate at home in the U.S. in March 2020.
The Orange County Historical Museum will be hosting “The Networks of Early North Carolina History” this February, diving into untold parts of the state’s history.
Instead of indoor dining rooms and crowded lines, guests at Triangle Restaurant Week may find themselves ordering through windows and eating in the comfort of their own homes.
Durham-based band D-Town Brass cannot be put into a box, and they like it that way.
For those looking for artistic inspiration to propel them into the new year, Carolina Performing Arts is hosting a brand-new event showcasing established and upcoming local artists.