This energetic, music-filled drama follows a group of talented students as they navigate the competitive world of New York City's High School of Performing Arts. With memorable songs, unforgettable characters, and infectious dancing, it's an inspiring look at the passion, drive, and lau...
As a middle schooler, he tormented deaf classmate Shoko Nishimiya to the point where she had to transfer schools, but karma catches up to Shoya as he finds himself shunned by his classmates in return. Now in high school and ostracized from his peers, Shoya aims to make amends for his ...
Metal music is known for its intense sound and powerful lyrics that have captivated listeners for decades. Here are the top ten metal songs that best showcase the genre's raw energy and emotional depth.
In the liner notes to the 1992 Marley box setSongs of Freedom,“Could You Be Loved” is described as “consciously recorded with a sound that would appeal to Black American radio programmers.” Indeed, it’s Marley’s only single to make theBillboardDance chart, thanks in part to a disco...
Even millennials — people who are not that old, thank you very much — can have trouble navigating the world that's ruled by TikTok trends and whatever else high-school-aged girls can't seem to stop raving about. Funneling those trends into a gift that she’ll like and use for ...
— Do you enjoy Han Lei’s songs — Yes. I enjoy his voice best. I can’t think of anyone with a ___ voice.A. worse B. best C. worst D. better 免费查看参考答案及解析 题目: 阅读下面短文, 在空白处填入一个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。Failure is the best teacher. We learn...
This list of the best songs from the 60s is a loving tribute to some of the artists that made it a decade that changed music forever.
Before compiling the best songs by one's favorite musical artists took minutes, greatest hits vinyl albums and CDs were popular. It was usually money well spent to get an artist's most notable tunes in one collection from the 1960s to the early portion of this century. It seems ...
The line, "There is one thing I’ll do, if it ever goes wrong, I’ll write you into all my songs" may be the one thing that exists in the present. It’s hard to know for sure, but when a love song comes this close to an elegy, it brings to mind fellow melancholic romantics...
Leo Bhanji doesn’t write songs so much as assemble musical Frankenstein’s monsters—malformed skeletal prototypes whose guts and wiring he does not attempt to polish or hide. “Damaged” is willfully oblique in its collage of lo-fi pop, R&B, hip-hop, church music, and UK dance, with ...