19 songs from summer ‘19
By Elliot Van Noy | August 25, 2019Give these songs a listen before school starts and fill the last precious days of summer with new discoveries.
Give these songs a listen before school starts and fill the last precious days of summer with new discoveries.
Get ready to start college by listening, watching and enjoying these touchstones of popular culture.
Fragmentary posthumous recordings are more usable than ever. Do they belong in songs the artist never heard?
These songs will make you regret all those times you wished the school year was over.
The Millers Arts Scholars presented their impressive and diverse projects Sunday evening in Culbreth Theater.
Coachella is a concentrated example of society’s current values and our diminished attachment to the music we consume.
After dreaming about spring, its colors and the vibrancy April promises, I wondered, what will spring look like this year at the University?
No moments in history — even ones that were scripted — could compare to Monday night’s joy.
Marsh said making music in Charlottesville is “a very personal experience.… There’s a feeling to every place."
“You know, a community radio station doesn't get very far without a community.”
Arts and Entertainment sat down with former Charlottesville drag queen Clinton Johnson to discuss discrimination within the drag community.
Charlottesville's local artists have found success navigating the new frontier of streaming platforms.
Feel free to rock out to these 10 confidence-building tunes that’d make anyone ready to cheer on the orange and blue.
One man is a music legend. The other, a basketball icon. Which Tony Bennett deserves the most praise?
Jukebox the Ghost hasn’t displayed a dynamic shift — rather, theirs is a slow slump into power-pop mediocrity.
The celebrities honored at these events put in almost as much work choosing their outfits as in portraying the characters that got them nominated.
Despite its exhaustive run-time, the Academy is still not hitting all of the marks when it comes to the categories they reward.
Students dressed to express whatever they needed to express — love, individuality, companionship, freedom.
“Part of comedy isn’t just saying ‘it’s funny because it’s true.'" Kondabolu said. "It’s also trying to show people another side of truth."
The art in the lobby of the Fralin varied in color and style, but the body of students dressed for the occasion seemed to have its own palette — shades of red, mustard yellow, and elegant black.