Singing Cadets Friday Football Concert
Friday, September 20, 2024 5:00–6:00 PM
- LocationMemorial Student Center
- DescriptionThe FREE Friday Football Concert "Open Rehearsal" held each home game Friday in the Memorial Student Center Flag Room at 5:00 pm
- Websitehttps://calendar.tamu.edu/live/events/335130-singing-cadets-friday-football-concert
- CategoriesArts & Entertainment, Campus Life, General Interest, International Students, Sports & Athletics
More from Upcoming Events
- Sep 206:00 PMCANCELED: Maroon & White Night in Downtown BryanLearn more about the event at the Maroon & White Night webpage! (https://www.bryantx.gov/maroonwhitenight/)
- Sep 206:00 PMMaroon & White NightTAMU and System faculty, staff and their families are invited to downtown Bryan to experience live entertainment, vibrant art, local cuisines, unique bars and exclusive shops. Also includes Bryan Farmers Market vendors. The event is FREE to attend and many businesses are offering incentives and discounts. Make sure to bring your ID or business cards for verification. Each month will highlight different areas across campus. September will highlight the State Employee Charitable Campaign, College of Education & Human Development research registry and University Health Services and Human Resources/Living Well Suicide Awareness Month. Visit https://www.bryantx.gov/maroonwhitenight/ (https://www.bryantx.gov/maroonwhitenight/) for a full list of entertainment and incentives being offered.
- Sep 207:00 PMUniversity Wind Symphony in ConcertAll concerts are live streamed at http://tx.ag/MUSALive (http://tx.ag/MUSALive) $5.00 General Admission Free with a current TAMU student ID Tickets are available through the MSC Box Office (https://boxoffice.tamu.edu/Online/default.asp).
- Sep 21All dayPattern RecognitionThe concept of pattern in the arts provides artists with tools that can limit creativity or suggest new avenues for exploration. They can offer a maker innovative options to explore with their accustomed materials and techniques; at times present a designer a means of control; advance a range of new ornaments and motifs to work with; and impart a new understanding of the relation between functional and decorative form. This exhibition will look at the impact of pattern in the arts using the University Art Galleries collections.
- Sep 21All dayPoetry in MotionSome pairings are literal, such as Joyce Kilmer's famous poem, "Tree,"next to Ola McNeill Davidson's beautiful painting of a tree. Others are more metaphysical and mysterious and ask the visitor to figure out the connection.
- Sep 21All dayShutter and Sound: The Jazz Photography of Bob WilloughbyThis exhibition consists of 50 images taken by photographer Bob Willoughby from 1950–1960. In these vibrant photos, Willoughby's appreciation for and understanding of jazz music is apparent. "Willoughby not only had a good eye, he had a keen ear, and seemed to know when to snap at an inspired moment." – Dave Brubeck By 1950 jazz was here to stay and had migrated its unique sound from the streets of New Orleans to American cities from coast to coast. As the world changed, jazz evolved as well. One of the foremost jazz scenes was in Los Angeles, CA. Some would say it was due to the laid-back surfer culture of California, but the jazz of this region had a flavor all its own and is often considered the birth of what we know as "smooth jazz" today. Willoughby developed photos at night in his Los Angeles garage as he listened to jazz on the radio. If he heard a live broadcast from a nearby venue, he'd drop everything to go take photographs. Willoughby's photographs stand out because of their realism and immediacy. Working in difficult lighting and crowded conditions, these images are jazz improvisation made manifest: they give the viewer a sense of vibrant intimacy as he captured wistful singers, jamming musicians, and enthusiastic audiences. Willoughby photographed jazz greats such as Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong, Miles Davis, DaveBrubeck, and Frank Sinatra, to name just a few. A Program of Exhibits USA with Texas Commission on the Arts and The National Endowment for the Arts.