Founded by a UTA student and an alumnus, Oddities Productions has taken root in Arlington to realize its artistic potential.
How’s the moon? How do you feel? Were people mean to you today? Those are the kind of questions Lauren Barry-Smith and Ashley Falgout ask each other before they perform.
Rascall Flatts said “Life Is a Highway,” Rihanna said “Shut Up and Drive” and Kanye West said to “Drive Slow Homie.” Driving often serves as the subject to music, but music can also be what gets students though their drives.
Music chair Dan Cavanagh hosts Mix Tape Tuesdays at Urban Alchemy Coffee + Wine Bar on the first Tuesday of each month from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Artists and musicians from all over gathered to share their talents at the Deep Ellum Arts Festival in Dallas. The festival featured live music, food and art in a variety of forms for attendees to enjoy.
All is fair in music and war.
A building several blocks south of campus exists simultaneously as both a house and concert venue: Treehouse UTA.
The Department of Music will launch a record label and its imprint before Christmas, said Dan Cavanagh, director of music industry studies.
Musicians in the Metroplex attempting to circumnavigate the road to fame may find relief in Music Detour: DFW Music Archive, a nonprofit website for artists hosted by UTA.
Music can serve as an aid for the mental strains that college students may face during their academic careers.
Streaming is changing the face of the music industry.
Most seasons last three or four months, but this Yeezy season has lasted longer than a year.
Andy Mineo wants you to get out of your comfort zone.
Film senior Rav Sitaula founded Skinny is Green during the summer. A few months later, they are already playing live gigs at places like The House of Blues in Dallas.
Apple music is the new kid on the block when it comes to streaming, and students have mixed reviews.
The UTA A Cappella Choir will perform alongside the English rock band the Rolling Stones this weekend in front of a large audience of dedicated fans and rock lovers.
The Levitt Pavilion debuts its summer series this weekend with free music, food and fun.
Students are going berserk for the return of the rap god.
While students were voting during Student Elections in the Gallery in the University Center, they could hear the sound of Nashville-style country music from musical duo As Girls Go.
Blisteringly fast-paced notes buzz through a soundscape of thick rhythm distortion, all topped up with odd-timed drum patterns. Get ready to finger tap that fret board into oblivion.
The students on campus chimed in to what they thought are good songs for Halloween.
Adonis Rose, Grammy-award winning jazz musician and artist-in-residence for UTA, said that part of the reason he is performing with jazz legend Ellis Marsalis at Scat Jazz Lounge in Fort Worth is because of the unique opportunity it provides students.
The hallmark of progressive rock is the concept album. That is, an album that follows a story line throughout. Queensryche's Operation Mindcrime , The Who's Tommy, Between the Buried and Me's The Parallax: Hypersleep Dialogues come to mind.
Most opening bands do not garner standing ovations. In fact, when it comes to music festivals, most attendees do not even show up till the headliners are about to take the stage. Both of these presumed facts turned out to be void Friday night at the sold out How the Edge Stole Christmas concert.
Twenty years ago this month, California rockers Rage Against the Machine debuted its sound to the music industry in a time of pure, raging bliss. Its fierce mix of funk, hard rock and a healthy dose of hip-hop fueled the flames of anyone looking to "fight the man."
A Bit Too Arty for its Own Good: Madness in the 2010's
If a guy's a jerk and Taylor Swift doesn’t write a song about it, is he still a jerk?