Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 5, 1990, edition 1 / Page 25
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Page 16 DTH Omnibus Thursday April 5, 1990 CALENDAR -sM too1 tos .sick of wiiig papsirs (Eiinisiirii MUSIC THE POPES at Cat's Cradle at 10 p.m. Call 967-9053 for details. NIKKI MEETS THE HIBACHI with NATALIE FARR in the Un ion Cabaret at 8 p.m. for $2. MIKE ZOGRY at Skylight Ex change. Call 933-5550 for details. UNC CONCERT BAND in Hill Hall at 8 p.m. MUSIC THE VELDT at Cat's Cradle at 10 p.m. Call 967-9053 for details. THE NEW INEVITABLES at The Cave. Call 968-9308 for details. MIDDAY in the Union Cabaret at 8 p.m. MARTY HOUGLAN and KATHY MacKINNON at Skylight Exchange. Call 933-5550 for details. MUSIC OF JOSQUIN'S TIME at Chapel of the Cross at 8 p.m. MUSIC BAD CHECKS at Cat's Cradle at 10 p.m. Call 967-9053 for details. JOE BELL AND THE STING ING BLADES at The Cave. Call 968-9308 for details. TAR HEEL VOICES in the Union Cabaret at 7 p.m. THEATER DR. FAUSTUS (preview), a Lab Theater production, in room 06 of Graham Memorial at 8 p.m. MUSIC VOLCANO SUNS at Cat's Cradle at 10 p.m. Call 967-9053 for details. OPEN BLUES JAM with CHARLIE WARD at The Cave. Call 968-9308 for details. THEATER DR. FAUSTUS, a Fine Arts Fes tival, Lab Theater production, in room 06 of Graham Memorial at 8 p.m. All NewL The Chapel Hill K&W Cafeteria is redecorated and ready for you! Comfortable surroundings and tasteful decor are part of K&Ws promise , of honest food value and pleasurable dining. Stop in today for lunch or dinner in our Chapel Hill location! See our all new look, and enjoy the same great K&W food enjoyed by millions of people in K&W locations around the Carolinas and Virginia. Our new Chapel Hill redecoration, coupled with great food, honest value, and consistent customer service, make up the "basics" of every K&W Cafeteria! Join us today! Conveniently located in University Mall, Chapel Hill. Mon.-Fri. 11:00 a.m.-2:30 p.m., 4:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m.; SatSun. 11 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Other K&W locations nearby include Cameron Village and North Hills Mall in Raleigh. And then there's . . . The UNC Department of Music sponsors a concert by the UNC Collegium Musicum entitled Music of Josquin's Time Friday, April 6 at 8 p.m. at Chapel of the Cross, The UNC Collegium Musicum, which : specializes in music of the medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque peri ods, with occasional forays into more modern work, performs sacred and secular music by Josquin and his contemporaries, featuring Josquin?s ; , Missa la sol fa re mi, under the direction of UNC faculty member John Nadas and visiting professor; Daniel Melamed. The group con sists of a chamber choir and instrumentalists who emphasize authentic performance practices. The concert is free. and open to the public. For more information, call the Music Department office a962-1093. David Grisnian, premierlmandolinistl appears with his Bluegrass Experience group at the ArtsCenter in Carrbor April 7 at 9 p.m. In- strumentalist, composer and bandleader Grisman has 'developed and?: refined his own jazzbluegrass hybrid he calls ,dawg music. i In 1967, Grisman played and helped lead Earth Opera, a highly re garcted underground rock band. He and Jerry Garcia later formed the is Old and in the Way bluegrass outfit, whose 1974 release, produced by Grisman, remains the best-selling bluegrass album of all time. Gris man has also performed on albums by artists including Bonnie Raitt and James Taylor Grisman V-most recent project is a double-length ; i: bluegrass album that features performances of traditional tunes with performances by Doc Watson, the Nashville Bluegrass Band and J.D. Croweamong otbers.The album was nominated for a Grammy in 1988 and wn NAIRD's Best Bluegrass Recording for that year. I Tickers are $12.50 for the public, $10 for Friends of the ArtsCnter.FoVmdrekmformati6n29-ARTS; " . jt . f j - - . ' . ; Tales From the Brothers Grimm a three-episode miniseries of up dated interpretations jof th classic works, begins Sunday, April 8 at 7 plm. on North Carolina iJPubic Television (channel 4) In presenting the tales for a modern audience, producerTom Davenport moves his t characters to America, placing them in a recognizable historical era. Ashpet airs April 8, along with The Frog King, Set in the pre-World War I rural South, Ashpet introduces a modern-day Cinderella and :; her tairy godmother, Dark bally, a black conjure woman. The Frog King follows the adventures of a tycoon's pampered daughter who must keep a pledge of friendship to a frog. Sunday, April 15, the second episode places Hansel and Cretel in . Depression-era Appalachia where they learn courage and resourceful- ness, and Soldier Jack catches Death in a sack, but then must learn about Ufe. Bearskin and Jack and the Dentist's Daughter air in the final episode bunday, April 22. In Bearskin, a penniless Civil War veteran makes a pact with the Devil and develops new resources of spiritual strength while, in Jack and the Dentist's Daughter f a poor farmer's son must demonstrate his resourcefulness to win his beloved in a small town in the 1930s. Clark Terry, one of the most original trumpet players in jazz, appears at the ArtsCenter Sunday, April 8 at 7i30 p.m. as part of the N.C. International Jazz Festival. Terry will be backed by the big band sound of the Unifour Jazz Ensemble, which will also be featured in the N.C. Jazz Showcase on Sunday, April 22. Terry combines technical virtuosity, swinging lyricism and impec cable taste, as well as a gift as a dramatist, as he spins spellbinding musical tales. After successful stints in the bands of Charlie Barnet, Charlie Ventura and Eddie Vinson, he joined Count Basie's band in 1948. Three years later, he joined the orchestra of Duke Ellington, where he remained as a featured soloist for eight years. He has focused increasingly on education, having written textbooks and presently di recting the Clark Terry Great Plains Jazz Camp. Tickets are $9 for the public, $7 for Friends. For more information, ca!1929-ARTS. TV Listings. Pages 12-16. Of.ITllBUS. All this and more.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 5, 1990, edition 1
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