Music Mondays: Welcome to 'Harry’s House'
Editor's note: The views and opinions expressed in this article do not reflect those of The Collegian.
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Editor's note: The views and opinions expressed in this article do not reflect those of The Collegian.
Editor’s Note: Zac Zibaitis is a columnist for The Collegian.
Conner Evans hosts WDCE's weekly Virginia news show with reporting help from fellow senior journalism students at UR. This week Conner talks with high schooler and activist Hadrien Padilla, Collegian multimedia editor Nina Joss, and reporters Ellie Watson and Julia Straka.
This week, hear stories about delays in getting students to the University of Richmond's on-campus isolation units, changes in midwife licensing, diversity at Virginia governor's schools and more. Brought to you by WDCE 90.1 FM and hosted by Conner Evans.
Conner Evans recaps the week in news as reported by his classmates who cover the Virginia General Assembly in the journalism department's course, Public Affairs Reporting. This week's show focuses on the recently passed budgets from the House of Delegates and Senate, as well as legislation about how to punish the intentional spread of STIs, in-state tuition for immigrants, regardless of citizenship status, and resolving unfair treatment of active military members.
Editor's Note: The views and opinions expressed in this article do not reflect those of The Collegian.
Editor's Note: The views and opinions expressed in this article do not reflect those of The Collegian.
King Krule has a lot of gifts that are hard to come by. The project’s red-headed leading man, Archy Marshall, stands so thin I’m always a little worried his guitar might eat him alive, and yet he bellows with an English-accented baritone that can rattle walls and seep its way inside your skull.
Five albums into their punk project dubbed The Goo Goo Dolls, John Rzeznik and Robby Takac broke through. “Name” was their first big hit, and left some fans complaining that they had gone too mainstream. One fan even sent Rzeznik a letter in 1998 that started “Dear F-----,” which, he told Guitar World, was not the first time he’d been called such an awful name.
The enigmatic cult icon Frank Ocean is finally back with some new content for the first time in a while. As he had done in the past with new singles such as “Biking,” “Chanel” and “Slide,” Ocean played his latest singles, “DHL” and “In My Room,” as the last song during his Beats1 radio show, blonded RADIO, with “DHL” being released on Oct. 19 and “In My Room” being released on Nov. 2.
This decade, Wilco’s frontman and songwriter, Jeff Tweedy, has released five albums with the band he started 25 years ago, taken time for solo projects and an album with his son, guest starred on Parks and Rec (in the fictional band Land Ho) and written a memoir released last November. And after all that, Tweedy and company released their 12th studio album, Ode to Joy, last month, his most essential work this decade.
Kanye West's latest album, Jesus Is King, was released last Friday to the tamest reception of any Kanye solo album to date. There have been fewer headlines, fewer conversations among casual rap fans and fewer tweets. People are finally taking Kanye less seriously, even as he turns his music toward the power of salvation.
Taylor Swift is having fun again on "Lover," and in a way that feels much more natural than "Reputation."
Josh Urban, host of the monthly rock show "The Signalman" on campus radio station WDCE, is the man behind the station's new initiative, RVA Worldwide.
In a benefit concert held Saturday night at The Pier, the university's radio station, WDCE 90.1 FM, sought not only to raise money, but also to raise campus awareness of the station.
It is Monday morning in a dark room in North Court, and the phone rings. A voice on the other end delivers bad news -- the third disaster this week. "We can't make it," the voice says, "We're splitting up."
The University of Richmond's student-run radio station, WDCE 90.1 FM, is seeking a transmission power-boost, which would increase the station's broadcast range from its current nine-mile radius to almost 25 miles.
Exactly fifty years ago this fall, rumors began to fly that the University of Richmond was going to have its very own radio station.
There is a hidden world in the basement of North Court. Behind a dark brown door near the varsity tennis courts is WDCE 90.1 FM Richmond, where shelves are filled with colorful CDs and records and the iTunes server has 40,000 songs.
The Westhampton Center construction began first and will end first. It started after Thanksgiving and is projected to end in August or September 2009. The Robins Foundation granted $3 million of the $3.6 million center, and more than 200 supporters have closed the gap in gifts. The contractor is RVA Construction and Smith McClane Architects is the architect.