Music Review: Cat Power 'Sun' review
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Banjo enthusiasts, historians and musicians alike are strumming their way to UNC for a banjo jamboree.
I Was Totally Destroying It has long penned instantly accessible songs with an edge of raw emotion that set the band apart. But on Vexations, bold becomes mediocre and pop with a rock soul becomes rock with no soul.
The premise of Sumner James’ debut 29 Days was to create an album from start to finish over the course of one month. He managed that while embracing a new personal style of music to boot.
Every week, Medium will post a story or review from the vault, #tbt style. This week: a review of Holy Ghost Tent Revival's album, Sweat Like The Old Days, written by former Diversions staffer Thompson Wall. Originally published on the Diversions blog on Aug. 22, 2012, this review is in anticipation of the Fourth of July show at Cat's Cradle this Saturday, featuring Holy Ghost Tent Revival and other bands.
Karina Soni thinks the combination of food and music is the perfect way to enjoy the summer outside.
The dB’s have not released an album of new material in 25 years. But in their newest album Falling Off the Sky, they merge the jangle-pop sounds of their early 1980s works with a more mature take on lyricism.
In their self-titled debut album, The Pinkerton Raid presents a collection of songs that reach a level of mastery in communication between band members that is unusual in debut albums.
Minrose Gwin Reading Donovan Lounge, Greenlaw Hall 12:30 p.m. Free and open to the public
In the span of a week, the music of Senegal, European youth and some of America’s finest jazz musicians will grace the stage of Memorial Hall.
Junior Catie King saw a void in Chapel Hill’s music community.
An eclectic group of southern musicians will grace a historic porch.
An Evening with Herbie Hancock and His Band Memorial Hall 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $10 to $139
In 1964, Dick Waterman knocked on blues musician Son House’s door with good news — the music House had recorded 30 years ago had finally made him famous.
The soulful melodies of internationally renowned and local jazz performers will reverberate throughout the community this weekend.
When people ask me what my favorite band is, I don’t have to think about my response. It’s Punch Brothers. The immediate followup question is usually some variant of, “I haven’t heard of them. What kind of music do they make?” It’s at this point that I always falter. I can rattle off the band’s entire history with ease, but I struggle to describe just what the group does.
After waking up one morning last year unable to move, Peter Vance had to make a choice — rock climbing or music.
Five towering racks of analog audio equipment loom over the occupants of the small, stuffy studio control room at ElectroMagnetic Radiation Recorders in Winston-Salem. The unassuming studio, a small, dumpy building with boarded windows, holds a history much more glamorous than its physical appearance, including the recording of several of the Avett Brothers’ early albums.
Tonight’s multi-concert lineup is not an LDOC celebration.
Every day, UNC students hear the exhaust of buses, the hubbub of the Pit and the scuff of shoes on bricks.