One hour of the best shows performed by the Shadowbox! The Shadowbox kicked off 2018 with an enormous bang, resurrecting the best sketches also songs from over the years. The best of the best show was Epic! February 9th at 10:30 pm, my friends and I waited for the shadow box concert to begin. When the lights flickered, and the room went fully black, that’s when I knew the show was about to begin. Suddenly I heard percussion begin to play with Billy DePerto, followed by some Guitar played by Brent Lambert and Aaron Joseph, dropped some Bass into the mix played by Adam Fauth and Keith Gibson, lastly, they played the Drums played by Rhys Washington. There were several vocalists throughout the night that can sing in a variety of vast range of octaves. When they sang, they did different covers of the song, it made it feel like I was at the actual concert of the real artist.
Not only did they sing that night, they also did stage dancing. It wasn’t a full-on dance number compared to Bruno Mars or Beyoncé, it was along the lines of running around the stage and getting the band hyped. Dressing up as the original artist so the audience can feel the music as if the audience were at the actual concert if
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They were there for comedic relief, however, the acting in the skit was not to the shadow boxes standards. The first skit was sperm dating. There were multiple sperms running around the stage trying to obtain to the female egg. Each sperm had a different personality and they kept trying to impress the female egg. She didn’t know which one to pick, somewhere rude, others were nice, a few were the typical rich. Which I thought was abnormal since they are sperms, but it reminded me of different men and the lady is speed dating. At the end of the skit, she finally picked the right sperm for
Correspondingly, after a few songs the band responded by singing the songs that the audience liked and by motivating them to scream and cheer for them. This way the audience wouldn’t get bored and stop cheering and dancing. This event took place in a dome-shaped like place where it also holds events like bull riding. There was a floor section where the people stand and there was the seat section where it went around the place and it was fenced around. This is what Hispanics call a “Jaripeo” because you can have concerts and bull riding, which is kind of like being at the
In Shadow House:The Gathering, by Dan Poblocki, he writes this book in 3rd person omniscient. He includes horrific pictures and events that happen in the book, so this book’s genre is horror and mystery. He makes the book nerve racking, engaging, and a terrifying adventure. This book includes 215 pages of non-stop thrills.
Ringing in the New Year, we’ve chosen an individual who has created his own music and created interesting remixes of other songs over the course of (now) 16 years. We enjoy the twists he plays on his music and admire his efforts to take his music to live performance stage. Local to Brick Township, NJ, Brian Stewart (DJversion666) started out, born and raised, in Evansville Indiana, playing in a multitude of bands, playing bass and/or singing various genres of music. Upon moving to Nashville, he has done studio work, laying down bass tracks for commercials and advertisements. Continuing down the path of music Stewart attended Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts. He combines various genres and ties them all together with an industrial sound.
would have to say that I might even go see them perform again. Everyone left me with a
...Captain James and the Pain, Joe Harvard, Colie Brice and others. Saturday featured artists on the big beach stage. New Jersey artists such as Bob Polding with Gary Oleyar (Loggins and Messina) did a set of their own unique blend of American Rock and roll, and Sean Cox had a set before making way for the ever-popular River City Extension.
It was New Year’s Eve. Often during so, the clubs and bars would be brimming with youth and underage teenagers waiting to count down to New Year’s Day. However, I spent my New Year’s Eve in the Staples Center in Los Angeles, California. The sports arena was mostly crowded with middle aged adults and everyone was there not to watch a game, but to bid farewell to a legendary hair metal band, Mötley Crüe. The band’s career spanned three decades and they ended it all at the birthplace of hair metal - Los Angeles, California. I really enjoyed the show because even though the band has aged staggeringly, they managed to maintain the elements of a hair metal concert – face-melting guitar solos, pyrotechnics, female dancers in skimpy clothing, and to
spirit was watching over him and how she had come to visit him before going on stage. He barely made it through the song. Despite
gave the mic back to the DJ, who turned the music up. But since KayDe, Kelley, and their friends had always danced that way to hip-hop music, they couldn't believe Mr. Bennett would carry out his threat—so they kept on freak-dancing.
They performed two songs during a much appreciated encore, the title track to their new album, “Ohio,” and a freestyle guitar solo. Even though all their songs are pretty much slow and sad, I left the concert feeling as if I had just experience every emotion or feeling there was. There style is so soft and bare. They lay it all on the table, take it or leave it. Not interested in mainstream, happy with their underground following, and plus one more fan after the show in Indianapolis.
Night train packs a punch that will keep you on your toes all night long. Raunchy riffs, dual guitar harmonies and a performance that will never fail to amuse you to say the least. Providing a mixture of country/blues/classic rock and funk, no matter how old or young you are, night train give you a bang for your buck and the performance of lifetime. Night Train consists of two accomplished artists who have worked in bands and as solo artists; both multi-instrumentalists adding a whole new dynamic to their musical performances. Having travelled the country touring, recording and gigging, both members of the duo are seasoned professionals that are a guaranteed asset to any given venue.
Sherlock Holmes was a huge global hit back in 2009, making the studio Warner Bros million of dollars, reinventing Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s deductive detective as a charming, wise cracking action hero. It’s no surprise that the Warner Bros studio has decided to create a sequel for franchise, with Guy Ritchie remaining on directing duties, and arch nemesis Professor Moriarty taking center stage as the film’s villain. The film starts out in London in 1891, Sherlock goes on a wild goose chase with his arch nemesis Professor James Moriarty (Jared Harris). Holmes’ investigation into Moriarty’s plot becomes dangerous as it leads him and Watson out of London to France, Germany and finally Switzerland. As Sherlock is close to
Over this semester, I attended two concerts. The first concert I went to was a performance done by the Swedish band Graveyard at the 9:30 club in DC. The second concert that I went to was at the George Mason Center for Performing Arts. This concert was a jazz competition between bands call The Battle of the Big Bands. Both concerts were performed very well and kept the audience, myself included, very entertained throughout the entire show. In this paper, I will be discussing each individual show in depth, and then continuing on to compare the two concerts.
Preparing for their upcoming Shiny and Oh So Bright tour, they gave the world a sample of what to expect in their first live television performance of "Solara" Monday night on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon.
In the end, they said their farewells, sang one last song and then left the stage. Well, at least we thought they did. As soon as they left the stage everyone started chanting, "We want more!" repeatedly for about five minutes. They ended up coming back on stage and executing one final song. I thought it was very awesome of them to do another song like that for us.