Wind Symphony honors Nelhybel
The Dartmouth Wind Symphony will celebrate the life and work of composer and arranger Vaclav Nelhybel in a concert titled "A Composer's Life: Vaclav Nelhybel," tonight in Spaulding Auditorium.
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The Dartmouth Wind Symphony will celebrate the life and work of composer and arranger Vaclav Nelhybel in a concert titled "A Composer's Life: Vaclav Nelhybel," tonight in Spaulding Auditorium.
"I am the blossom pressed in a book,/ found again after two hundred years ... I am the one whose love/ overcomes you, already with you/ when you think to call my name ..."
Three student a cappella groups delivered three unique yet rich styles of performance at this Homecoming Weekend's Fall Fling, an annual tradition that allows students to take center stage on the biggest, most exciting weekend at the College.
The Alloy Orchestra, a regular visitor to the College's artistic landscape, will perform their original score to accompany the 1927 film "The Unknown" by Todd Browning. The Orchestra is known for designing creative score to silent and classic films.
The Reduced Shakespeare Company, one of the world's best-known touring comedy troupes, will perform its hilarious repertoire of condensed versions of religious, political and literary classics at a sold-out show tonight.
The splendor of the art of puppet theater continues when two of the world's most esteemed ensembles perform tomorrow and Wednesday nights as part of the Hopkins Center's Festival of International Puppetry.
Bonded by the dual purposes of creating an innovative rhythm and forging a cultural and societal bond, the Afro-Brazilian percussion group Olodum will appear tonight in Spaulding Auditorium.
Rusted Root, an up-and-coming alternative band, will bring its sound to the stage at Leede Arena on Oct. 26. It is currently the only act scheduled and confirmed to perform during Fall term by the Programming Board.
"History says, Don't hope/ On this side of the grave./ But then, once in a lifetime/ The longed-for tidal wave/ Of justice can rise up,/ And hope and history rhyme."
The student play "Vicious Cycle," alternately titled "How Elvis Really Died," opened last night in the Bentley Theater, unleashing a message about what happens when the limits of friendship are pushed too far.
Very often, photographs lie at the heart of a family's history and serve to connect the present with its past experiences, traditions and heritage.
The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, the country's premiere chamber music organization, performed Northern Lights Electric by Music Professor Paul Moravec last night.
Works by Poulenc, Brahms and Mahler are on the program for a concert by the Handel Society and the New Hampshire Symphony Orchestra tonight in Spaulding Auditorium at 8:00 p.m..
At the annual Culley Concerto competition for soloists in three different categories of instruments on Tuesday, Bridget Canniff '96, Katie LaForgia '97 and Emily Zarins '98 garnered first-place awards in the string, woodwind and brass categories, respectively.
About nine years ago, trumpeter Wynton Marsalis invited a 15-year-old bassist to jam with him at the Philadelphia Academy of Music. Hundreds of concerts, club dates and 80 recordings later, Christian McBride has carved out quite a niche for himself among the pantheon of great jazz bassists.
Reputed to be the best traditional Irish band playing today, the quintet Altan will appear in concert at 8:00 p.m. on Saturday, March 30.
Many Americans have traditionally viewed their culture and others from a Eurocentric viewpoint. So it should come as no surprise that we are completely perplexed by cultural, economic and social exchanges with foreign cultures -- such as that of the Japanese.
P.S. 122 Field Trips, an offbeat variety show heralded as "Ed Sullivan for the avant garde," will perform tonight and Wednesday night in the Moore Theater.
Underneath a sky of red, green and black balloons symbolizing the power of Africa and that of her descendants, the Black History Extravaganza program showcased Dartmouth artistic talent in celebration of Black History Month.
Students grab the reins and take charge by directing and performing in two powerful plays this week -- "Nobody's Gilgul" by Lois Roisman and "Betrayal" by Harold Pinter.