Holy Cross Wind Ensemble | Earth Songs
Join the Holy Cross Wind Ensemble for a program featuring Frank Ticheli's "Earth Song" along with works by Whitacre, Hall, Ives, Iannaccone, Balmages and others.
Join the Holy Cross Wind Ensemble for a program featuring Frank Ticheli's "Earth Song" along with works by Whitacre, Hall, Ives, Iannaccone, Balmages and others.
Join us for a performance of compositions and dances inspired by the current gallery exhibition Blue Profundity: Contemporary Artists Revisit a Color.
Join the Holy Cross Laptop Ensemble Federation (H-CLEF) for a concert of choreographed sound and image showcasing final student projects written for Music 242: Coding Music.
Join us for the College’s Annual Festival of Lessons and Carols for Advent.
Associate Professor Emeritus Michael Beatty's exhibition celebrates his sculpture practice, which investigates a hierarchy of focus and support through a dialogue between digital and handmade forms.
The award-winning Bala Chamber Brass presents a variety of original music for brass quintet, featuring both staples of the repertoire and lesser-known works.
College of the Holy Cross faculty member Leah Hager Cohen, an award-winning author of seven novels and five works of nonfiction, is featured in this Faculty Reading event sponsored by the Creative Writing Program.
Stephen Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd is a musical adaptation of a delectably lurid melodrama about a barber whose fury and despair over the loss of his innocent wife turns him into a serial killer. Meaghan Deiter directs.
As their neighborhood changes in unpredictable ways, a beloved Pittsburgh diner owner and his customers seek work, love, and justice in this heartfelt and hilarious play. Two Trains Running is the 1960s chapter of acclaimed playwright August Wilson’s American Century Cycle, a decade-by-decade saga of African American life in the 20th century.
Join us for Irish Music Hour featuring Diarmuid Ó Meachair (button accordion & melodeon) and Matt Mulqueen (piano) with a program of the music of PJ Conlon (1920's New York) and Joe Derrane (1940's Boston).