At age 29, Jesso is a late bloomer for today’s music industry, yet it is his maturity that brings his music the gravitas and emotional intelligence that makes it so powerful.
Listening to the album, one gets the sense that she might be singing her twitter feed aloud.
Our Own House is fun, upbeat, relatable and a joy to jam out to from start to finish.
How long can they rely on the same formulas to generate their music? With Smoke + Mirrors, it would seem they intend to find out.
Kodaline may have taken a few more pages out of Coldplay’s book with Coming Up for Air than one might like, but they salvage their identity with a few standout tracks that separate them from this...
With soaring ballads and thick, entrancing beats, Panda Bear shows us how to tune out extraneous distractions and exist thoroughly in the present.
With 1989, Swift breaks out of her comfort zone and hardly misses a beat.
Check out the must-see stops in downtown Durham.
Michaelson's "Lights Out" is louder, heavier and more produced than the work old fans know and love.
The Duke University Health System is experiencing a decrease in revenue and in patient volume, as a result of shifts in the national economy and trends in health care. The decreases have hit almost every area of the system, including the Duke Cancer Center, pictured.
Duke is now involved in two online educational initiatives. Through the Coursera platform, professors are able to offer large-scale courses to the public, whereas 2u courses are intended for Duke students.
The Chronicle is sending two reporters and a photographer to the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte this week. Major speakers include President Barack Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama and former president Bill Clinton.
Of 60,000 research trials entered into the ClinicalTrials.gov registry from 2005 to 2010, the analysis revealed that around 5,000 of them—about 8 percent—were designed for children younger than 18 years old.
Researches from the ENCODE project—some of whom are Duke faculty—have found that some DNA strands previously thought to be “junk DNA” actually contain a significant amount of information.