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(04/20/24 4:36pm)
The Jacobs School of Music will present “Jazz Celebration” at 7:30 p.m.April 20 at the Musical Arts Center. The concert will feature the Jacobs Jazz Studies program’s students and teachers playing old favorites and new hits in jazz. Guest musicians will also make an appearance.
(04/10/24 11:23pm)
The Jacobs School of Music will perform “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street” at 7:30 p.m., April 12-13 at the Musical Arts Center. IU students Alice Lind and Elise Miller will play Mrs. Lovett, while the titular character Sweeney will be played by IU students Skyler Schlenker and Sam Witmer.
(03/28/24 10:03pm)
The Jacobs School of Music Ballet Theater department will make history this weekend when its new production “Star on the Rise: La Bayadère...Reimagined!” opens at 7:30 p.m., March 29 with three different casts at the Musical Arts Center.
(03/25/24 6:15pm)
Juilliard piano and chamber music faculty member Orli Shaham will perform from 8 - 10 p.m. March 25, at Auer Hall as guest pianist. She will be joined by Norman Krieger, chair of the piano department at the Jacobs School of Music, and the Pacifica Quartet, the faculty string quartet-in-residence at the Jacobs School of Music.
(03/13/24 8:57pm)
The Jacobs School of Music held the 16th annual Jean Sinor Memorial Lecture from 6 - 7:15 p.m., March 6 in the Simon Music Center. Students and faculty filled the room to hear a presentation by Beatriz Ilari, a guest speaker from the Musical Education department of the University of Southern California.
(02/29/24 7:26pm)
Darkness descended over the Musical Arts Center stage as the house lights went down for the dress rehearsal. A red light cut through this darkness, projecting the title of the first Russian opera to be performed at the Jacobs School of Music, “Eugene Onegin.” Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky wrote the music and libretto for the opera.
(02/27/24 11:15pm)
Herman B Wells Statue
(02/27/24 11:02pm)
In one of John Mellencamp’s most famous songs, he sings of his love for small towns and the place where he was born. That small town in question, Seymour, is only an hour away from Bloomington.
(02/25/24 9:33pm)
Dr. Eugenia Cheng is on a mission to change the perception of math, to make it fun and exciting.
(02/20/24 3:09pm)
On June 25, 2004, one of the most iconic romance movies debuted in theaters. Based on a book by Nicholas Sparks, “The Notebook” has become a symbol of romantic passion with the image of Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams kissing in the rain being recognizable around the world.
(02/13/24 6:48pm)
Nate Powell promoted “Fall Through” at 6:30 p.m., Feb. 9 in Morganstern’s Bookstore and Café, explained his creative process and signed copies of his books. “Fall Through” is the story of a time-travelling punk rock band — inspired by Powell’s punk rock past — who jump between realities when they play a specific song.
(02/12/24 11:30pm)
Speculation had been building for weeks before the Grammys. Rumors abounded that Taylor Swift would announce her “Reputations (Taylor’s Version)” album when she won an award.
(02/08/24 2:36pm)
“An American Dream” originally premiered at the Seattle Opera in 2015. It tells the story of Setsuko Kobayashi, a Japanese American girl whose family is sent to an internment camp during World War II and Eva Crowley, the Jewish immigrant who escaped Germany and moves in to the Kobayashis’ home.
(02/06/24 4:19pm)
Director Jenny McKnight’s pared down version of Shakespeare’s “Measure for Measure” is currently being presented by the IU Department of Theatre, Drama and Contemporary Dance in the Studio Theatre. The play opened Jan. 19 and runs through Jan. 27. While the show is currently sold out, those wishing to view the performance are advised to arrive at the theater 45 minutes before showtime to place their name on a waitlist.
(02/07/24 2:55pm)
Spring is here, IU students, and with it, the rush to find a place to call home for the fall semester. With apartment availabilities quickly dwindling and time running out to find that perfect spot, something you might not be thinking about is roommates.
(01/29/24 9:56pm)
The Jacobs School of Music Opera and Ballet Theater will present “An American Dream” at 7:30 p.m, Feb. 2-3 in the Musical Arts Center. The opera tells the stories of two families — one Jewish and one Japanese — who faced discrimination and were forced to leave their homes during World War II.
(01/21/24 4:56pm)
About a year ago, Daixuan Ai, a doctoral composition student at the Jacobs School of Music, had just read about a racially motivated attack on an IU freshman in the New York Times. An 18-year-old Asian student was getting off a Bloomington transit bus Jan. 11, 2023, when Billie R. Davis, a 56-year-old Bloomington woman, rushed at her and stabbed her seven times in the head, leaving visible puncture marks. Davis told authorities she had stabbed the student because she was Asian.
(01/10/24 5:33pm)
It’s that time of year again: the start of the spring semester. IU students, old and new, are pulled back into another round of classes, clothes and textbooks. Of course, your parents have come with you to send you off for the semester; naturally, they want to eat with you and see where you live.
(12/10/23 11:01pm)
John Oliver was three months late. The award-winning late-night host was supposed to perform at the IU Auditorium on Sept. 30, but two days before his performance, the actors strike ended, and he rushed off to resume “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver.”
(12/10/23 7:54pm)
For Singing Hoosiers director Chris Albanese, putting on concerts goes back to his childhood.