Word: angst
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...campaign for patriotism in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, featuring country singers or aging pop stars. Cut out the pop, add some violence and obscenity, keep some of the political impact and the shot is closer to the mark. The tour is a celebration that uses anger, angst and passion to create a kind of energy one cannot find tapping a foot and smoking a joint at a Dave Matthews Band show. The most significant metal excursion of the post-summer season, the Pledge of Allegiance tour made its way to Worcester on Oct. 30 and left concertgoers...
...angst has to do with University development at all on this site,” McCready says. “It’s not what’s being built, how tall or how big. Harvard is the issue...
...internet has long been viewed with suspicion by the often insular business and government elites of the Caribbean Basin. It was just one more way, they grumbled, to get trampled by the global economy. But bold investors are finding opportunity in that angst. This year, more than 5,000 miles of undersea fiber-optic cable is being laid from Miami to the Yucatan to the Bahamas, wiring 15 countries and islands. The $450 million venture is led by a firm based in Miami and Bermuda, aptly called New World Network. "It makes sense for us precisely because the Caribbean...
...named Chapel Hill trio Ben Folds Five. With Darren Jessee on drums and Robert Sledge on bass, the group soon found a niche in the indie-rock scene. Their self-titled debut album betrayed the band’s powerful combination of Folds’s reckless piano playing, angst-ridden, intelligent lyrics and uncanny ability to write addictive hooks. Wading through the cliché-filled waters of lost love, self-loathing and rejection with a raw originality, Folds quickly proved his rare ability to take the uniquely personal experiences of himself and the characters in his songs and turn...
...believe in God / So I can’t be saved / All the low things / I’ve learned to be / In this mess I have made.” And it was a record store failure. The album was a far cry from the loud, angry angst of the band’s debut, and certainly not “Brick: Part Two” as so many fans and critics wanted. The band’s most introspective, well-integrated album was met with largely mediocre sales and reviews...