Left to right: Maya Mortman, Amy Hoffman, Daniel Radin and Colby Blauvelt of Future Teens. (Courtesy Adam Parshall)
There’s a number of things that could define Boston’s breakthrough “bummer pop” quartet Future Teens: Their reverence of pop classics, their grindstone, DIY ambition, the wave of buzzworthy cover compilations with their names attached. But to its members, Future Teens is a sort of endless riff of their name, a slight piece of performance art. Listen to the first four tracks on the group’s new melodically polished EP “Deliberately Alive” (out now) and you’ll notice an earnestness and kinetic energy driving the machine. But instead of a triumphant closer, we’re gifted a twangy, somber arrangement of Cher’s 1998 smash pop hit “Believe.”
Calendarul zilei – 6 martie
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Prima reprezentație „Next to Normal – (A)normal , în spectacol concert, pe scena Teatrului Național de Operetă și Musical „Ion Dacian
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Nothing Dies
Boston-based singer/songwriter Anjimile Chithambo released his debut record,
Giver Taker, this September via Father/Daughter. The record is a transformative journey through life, death, and rebirth, reflecting on Anjimile’s growth as he got sober and came out as transmasculine and nonbinary. His pastoral folk style is fertile ground for Anjimile’s poetic lyrics to take deep root. Over the course of the record, he grows a simultaneously bold and nourishing artistic statement, containing stories of grief, hope, and spirituality.
Under the Radar caught up with Anjimile to explore some of the stories that went into the record.
Newton students take âjourneysâ in writing
By Lexi Matthews and Riley Villiers Boston University journalists,Updated December 17, 2020, 4:19 p.m.
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Louise Stedman, 11, holds up a copy of âJourneys in Writing,â the product of the virtual writing program with several other Newton students during quarantine.Photo courtesy of Dale Norman (Custom credit)
Although the pandemic has kept her mostly inside this year, Louise Stedman, 11, has let her imagination take her far away from home. Over the past several months, Stedman participated in âJourneys In Writing,â a virtual program for elementary and middle school students.
As a part of the program, Stedman wrote the âAdventures of the Alard Sisters Book 1: In Search of a Missing Momâ with one of her friends in the program.