Sing-along performance supports local homeless shelter
This Christmas season will start with a little bit of song and community this year at the first Bloomington Christmas Sing-Along.
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This Christmas season will start with a little bit of song and community this year at the first Bloomington Christmas Sing-Along.
‘Tis the season for holiday celebrations, and at Collins Living Learning Center, it’s time for the annual Dickens Dinner.
As a young girl, Camaron Ochs, better known as popular country singer Cam, would frequently visit her grandparents’ ranch in Southern California. Between all the hard labor, hospitality and Patsy Cline records, she said she began to develop her concept of the country lifestyle.
Members of the Bloomington Pipers’ Society will meet for its November Bagpipe Gathering at 4 p.m. Sunday at the Folklore and Ethnomusicology Building on Indiana Avenue, according to the group’s website.
Many students waited to gain admission to IU World’s Fare in a line extending from the doors of Simon Skjodt Alumni Hall past the South Lounge of the Indiana Memorial Union on Friday.
Christmas came a little early to Bloomington this year as snow and carols filled the room Saturday night in the IU Auditorium.
Though the majority of popular musicians only play with a few acts during their lifetimes, rock drummer Kenny Aronoff has played with more than 70 bands and artists, according to his website.
Since dropping out of school to pursue music, the members of Twin Peaks have come a long way. On Thursday, the Chicago-based indie band will make its debut at The Bishop.
With the Player’s Pub announcing its supposed last night of business Nov. 1, Dena El Saffar worried her band’s show at the venue this Thursday would never see the stage. Saffar is the bandleader of Salaam, a quartet that performs and composes Middle Eastern and Northern African music.
In partnership with the Indian Student Association, the Hutton Honors College will showcase various styles of religious music at 7 p.m. today, according to a press release from Hutton.
The entire first level of the IU Auditorium was filled with dancing and swaying attendees Saturday night for the 23rd annual Potpourri of the Arts.
Those involved in the Bloomington Playwrights Project will need a lot of energy and focus before curtain call this weekend during the Ike and Julie Arnove PlayOffs. The fundraising event will challenge theater veterans and novices alike at 7:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday in the Timothy J. Wiles Theater at Bloomington Playwrights Project.
IU Theatre will bring a touch of religion to campus with the visual exhibition that is “Jesus Christ Superstar.” The show will be performed 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Ruth N. Halls Theatre. It will be the last production directed by IU veteran George Pinney.
On their supposed last night of business, Players Pub was overflowing onto the streets. Loud voices drained out the clatter and tumble behind the bar. Waitresses weaved past booths and tables, hoisting trays of burgers and beers over their heads.
The Grupo de Teatro VIDA is a Bloomington-based theater project that puts together Spanish and Portuguese plays every fall semester. This weekend VIDA performed the plays that were developed this year at the Bloomington Playwrights Project. The presentation consisted of four plays, one in Portuguese and three in Spanish.
As the IU Dance Marathon approaches and participants scramble to raise the last of their funding, the various committees are working on the last details. With the philanthropy event comes the music necessary to keep the participants dancing.
Bloomington’s Halloween weekend will mix the spooky with some sonnets as the Cardinal Stage Company performs Shakespeare’s “Merchant of Venice” at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Ivy Tech Whikehart Auditorium.
The coasts of the United States will come to Bloomington as New York artist Alex Frankel and California duo Classixx perform with Neon Indian, an Austin, Texas-based band, at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Bluebird.
As classical music filled the Indiana Memorial Union Starbucks gallery, studying students looked up from their books, surprised to see the performance space at the back of the room being utilized for the first time.
The IU Theatre will bring laughter to the stage with the comedic play “Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike.”