2021 Music in Review: The 10 Best Albums of the Year
This year saw the release of albums featuring new directions that artists devised during the lockdowns as well as albums postponed from their 2020 release due to COVID-19.
This year saw the release of albums featuring new directions that artists devised during the lockdowns as well as albums postponed from their 2020 release due to COVID-19.
Last Friday, Mehretu joined a Dartmouth physics professor and a MoMA curator for a live conversation in the Hood’s auditorium.
With his fourth full-length album in five years, “LP!,” JPEGMAFIA furthers his reputation as one of the most experimental hip-hop artists working today.
Lowe’s Signifyin’ Natives will perform alongside Dartmouth’s avant-garde student jazz group.
While the play's recent world premiere featured mostly people of color, the cast in the theater department’s adaptation is predominantly white.
The performance at The Church of Christ brought together students and community members.
The intimate restaurant offers chic, affordable dishes made with local ingredients.
Debuting during the summer of 2021, the six member band Microsoft Paint Shark aims to share their own take on music through the use of a diverse set of instruments in a variety of genres.
Tuesday night’s performance will feature award-winning work from the ensemble’s Mexican/United States Composition Competition.
Through the games, the show offers illuminating social commentary.
Three plays, all produced with a barebones set and minimal actor movement, aim to allow the audience to better engage with the shows’ content.
While the cafe offers high-quality lattes, the food is unfulfilling and its price is not justified.
The album is lyrically innovative and stunning in its explorations of nature, fame and growth, but it occasionally stagnates sonically.
Featuring Indigenous designs, the event will be held in person and streamed online.
“Images of Disability” examines artistic representations of disability
First-year students perform songs, skits and monologues at the Bentley Theater.
The film balances Marvel action sequences with a thoughtful reflection on family, love and Chinese culture.
In a live conversation, Fields spoke about her works in the Hood’s current “Form and Relation” exhibit.
The singer-songwriter performed songs from “Stranger in the Alps” and “Punisher.”
The student-led showcase, put on by the Black Underground Theatre Association, aims to highlight Black voices on campus through a variety of artistic mediums.