Dawes show their growth at the Jefferson
By Ben Hitchcock | February 12, 2019Dawes play soft rock — they are the sonic equivalent of a warm shower.
Dawes play soft rock — they are the sonic equivalent of a warm shower.
“The Elephant in the Room” is meant to make you laugh, cry and leave having learned something important.
2019’s New Works Festival is a diverse showing, but the pieces all maintain a theme of youth and present dialogue which feels modern.
The band was great, but for as great as they could’ve been, the sold-out Charlottesville crowd was cheated.
Montiel is confident and has found success despite the historical preferences for male professionals. “Now is a very good moment for Latin American women,” she said.
The event was characterized by the youth with a sense of their power in the room.
“So much of photography is serendipity,” Wylie reminded the crowd.
Brown led a team of undergraduate students in a nationally held contest to design an environmentally sustainable, community-oriented train station.
“Listen,” Leslie Odom Jr. addressed the crowd. “Healing can’t even begin until you acknowledge where you’ve come from.”
Created by Charlottesville artist and musician Ramona Martinez, the "Visions of Mary" exhibit was a collection of iconography that seeks to serve as “an invitation for every visitor, regardless of faith, to sit with the love of the Virgin Mary.”
Now in its 31st year, the Virginia Film Festival offers an excellent opportunity for students to interact with the community beyond Grounds.
Each year, for one week, theaters across the world screen the Manhattan Film Festival’s selection of finalist films. Unlike other festivals, though, the audience gets to participate, voting on their favorite film and actor after the showing.
Moon Taxi seemed to pull a new trick out of their sleeve for each song in their show at Sprint Pavilion.
Americana songwriter and his band played an introspective set at the Sprint Pavilion
Folk rock singer-songwriter created a family out of a crowd of strangers
The Aug. 25 concert will be free for students.
Hundreds of community members came together to sing for “healing, harmony and fun” Sunday afternoon.
Entering a Buckethead concert is like stepping into a parallel universe where the absurd becomes commonplace and no one can seem to get enough.
Anderson .Paak and the Free Nationals put on a lively, jazz-infused performance as the closing act of UPC-sponsored SpringFest.
Old Crow Medicine Show bring bluegrass to life