Seeking comfort while in quarantine? Listen to these albums
By Stephen Atkinson and Skyler Graham | April 9, 2020When I think of “comforting” albums, my mind shoots in several directions. Comfort can mean a lot of things.
When I think of “comforting” albums, my mind shoots in several directions. Comfort can mean a lot of things.
What else should you do with the luxury of being stuck at home (maybe even out of work — more free time!) but ignore the need to process your situation and instead set extremely transformative goals for yourself?
The highest bidders in The Patchwork Market’s Instagram auctions win hand-crafted prizes, but founder Morgan Grimm’s hope is that the featured makers come out victorious, too.
Marie Kondo and Audrey Gelman have, wittingly or not, made their honest messages into beautiful and fancy goods and services that fail to honor their original design.
Over the last few days, “Future Nostalgia” is one of the few things that has made me smile, one of the few things that has made me dance.
My eyes are blurry, and I can’t really tell where my phone screen ends and the darkness begins.
“3.15.2020,” the fourth album by Childish Gambino, addresses the same fears that “Awaken, My Love!” did, but the approach couldn’t be more different.
On Tuesday, a few days ahead of its slated release date, Sufjan Stevens released “Aporia,” his latest collaborative effort with his stepfather Lowell Brams.
Conan Gray is lonely. A global pandemic has him isolated at home, surrounded by the comforts of musical instruments and Taylor Swift and Lorde posters.
As counter-cultural and independent as rap claims to be, it is still a hierarchical institution.
Livelihoods, economies and entire cultures have been affected by COVID-19.
Owner Allie Labate always intended to use VYB Studio as a space that helped and supported the Durham community — she just didn’t anticipate doing it amid a global pandemic.
When she received the March 10 email from Duke administration, announcing the extension of Spring Break and the transition to remote learning, senior Christine Yang’s first thought was whether Street Medicine’s annual showcase would go on.
Over the course of the last week, day-to-day life around the world has come to a grinding halt in response to the rapid spread of COVID-19.
The world of “The Roadkill Club” is not quite like our own.
On March 11, this year’s Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, which is held annually in Durham, N.C., was cancelled.
As soon as she walked in, Retta began joking about the radical changes at Duke since her graduation in 1992.
Meg Remy always seems to return at exactly the right time.
Classical music has a problem. Its audience is mostly white, educated, wealthy, and old
After announcing and promptly disregarding multiple release dates, Lil Uzi Vert finally released his sophomore album “Eternal Atake.”