D'Angelo. Brian Wilson. Sly Stone. We lost these greats and so many more in 2025 — singers, producers, conductors and writers whose departures gave us a pang of loss, but whose art still lifts us up.
You may have heard someone muttering, “The world is so harsh these days…” while passing by. But this statement is incorrect.
During temporary breaks from their bands, these three musicians went on to make a name for themselves in different genres.
On Friday evening, a crowd gathered in Richardton to worship alongside a performance by North Dakota’s only fully professional choral ensemble.
The opera singer and recitalist teams up with the trio of classically trained string musicians for a special performance of ...
Led by Grammy-winning Terell Stafford, the ensemble took a long-awaited trip to Tokyo last spring, wowing the audience at a ...
Three students from the Jackson Township High School Instrumental Music Department earned acceptance into prestigious South Jersey Band and Orchestra Association Region III Honors Ensembles following ...
Winners will receive a $1,000 monetary prize, the opportunity to work with the orchestra and a recording of the concert.
On a Friday night at Berlin’s famed Metropol, the two surviving members of David Bowie’s Black American three-man backing ...
You and Me, a free experimental music festival in Beijing, grew from one teenager’s search for refuge. Now it faces ...
Students from Lakeview Schools will be performing with other young musicians from around the region, at a couple of upcoming events this winter. Last week, the Lakeview band department announced that ...
The Sway Machinery have long been the bridge between a few different worlds. Founded by Jeremiah Lockwood, the grandson of a famous cantor who also spent ...