Concert to showcase young talents
Master of music composition student Kenji Kuriyama will showcase his original work titled “Guanacaste Fanfare, Concerto in D minor” today at the Musical Arts Youth Orchestra’s “Musical Legends II.”
Master of music composition student Kenji Kuriyama will showcase his original work titled “Guanacaste Fanfare, Concerto in D minor” today at the Musical Arts Youth Orchestra’s “Musical Legends II.”
Though the gloomy weather and Easter holiday played a part in the number of attendees at Sunday’s Awesomefest, coordinator Sven Carlsgaard was very pleased with the turnout.
Joe Masek’s senior exhibition, “Candy Coated Chaos,” on Friday and Saturday at The Lodge was more than a senior art show. It was a combination concert and exhibit for charity.
With a last minute scramble to change the location and set up another tent, Culture Shock organizers engaged alerts via Facebook and Twitter to keep the public informed, and despite the rain, the music lovers still came.
For Joe Masek, art is about more than just the finished product — it is about everything the artist has gone through before the brush ever touches the canvas.
If the weather holds out, Dunn Meadow will be filled with music lovers Saturday. Underneath the WIUX tents, students and Bloomington residents will enjoy the songs of local and national indie bands.
This is the second installment of Adria Nassim’s book reviews in recognition of Autism Awareness Month. The protagonists of the books she reviews deal with forms of autism or Asberger’s syndrome in some way and are written to help Indiana Daily Student readers keep an open mind in regard to autism and other disabilities.
IU Soul Revue members will be grooving to the sounds of everything from Prince to Brandy on Saturday at the Burskirk-Chumley Theater.
Pop rock band Rodeo Ruby Love has had a continuing revolution of members — at least far too many for front man Zach Melton to count. However, no matter who is involved with the band, the same set of catchy songs remains.
The Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures presents its Arabic Literature Seminar weekend, beginning today with guest speaker professor Muhammed Bennis, who will give a workshop on the creative process of his own poetry.
Just days away from the premiere of his directorial debut, IU senior Jacob Sherry is still in production mode.
Third-generation Japanese-American Richard Aoki was a controversial civil rights activist who became one of the founding members of the Black Panther Party.
Conductor Brent Wallarab promises this year’s annual Big Band Extravaganza: For Dancers Only will leave audience members dancing in the lobby.
I first encountered K-pop when I was living in Taiwan. I heard a song called “Sorry Sorry” by a band named Super Junior, and I was hooked.
It’s that time of year again where the African American Arts Institute students showcase their talents.
Ballet dancers let their hair loose as they stepped into the role of choreographer for “Ballet at the BCT: The Choreography Project” on Tuesday.
Forty members of the 90-member Singing Hoosiers choir made the cut in November to go on a 13-day tour through three major cities in China. With the tour of Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong less than a month away, the Singing Hoosiers are rehearsing to show off IU abroad.
When I think of Bloomington, a town smack in the middle of our nation’s heartland, I’m reminded of the endless countryside, rustic houses and warm summer evenings when friends gather around a campfire at night, telling jokes and reminiscing about the past. While people may not see Italy as a likely comparison to the Midwest, there are more similarities than meet the eye.
Kathleen Baldwin’s session, “The Art of the Orgasm, Yours and Mine,” was Tuesday at The Venue Fine Art & Gifts. Baldwin talked about several topics related to the misconceptions surrounding male and female orgasm as well as the stereotypes of sexual relations in general, discussing aspects such as men and women’s expectations, the effect of the porn industry on sex and the negative connotations sex has.
It all started when Crystal Taliefero-Pratt didn’t make the cut the for IU Soul Revue. Now, years later, the musician who has performed alongside world-renowned artists has returned to Bloomington and has been awarded the African American Arts Institute’s most coveted award.