Lots of news: HN surpasses fundraising goal for Gives days; earns Nebraska Arts Council grant; adds a board member; hires a second paid employee and introduces five summer interns.
Lots of news: HN surpasses fundraising goal for Gives days; earns Nebraska Arts Council grant; adds a board member; hires a second paid employee and introduces five summer interns.
Hear Nebraska is competing for a share of more than $600,000 in matching funds for Give to Lincoln Day and Omaha Gives. Please help us grow.
Kill County's frontmen speak with Hear Nebraska about making the band work remotely, what's different about their new album and what "Nebraska music" means to them in this video interview.
With 20 slides, at 20 seconds each, HN co-founder Andrew Norman presents Hear Nebraska's state of the union during Pecha Kucha at Slowdown.
The Slowdown got rowdy. See what happened in this photo essay by Daniel Muller and Andrew Norman.
Today, Hear Nebraska makes its only paid employee full-time. We also welcome three new interns and two veteran holdovers to produce content that cultivates our music community.
Hear Nebraska's editor-in-chief reflects upon the best (sometimes worst) year of his life: "Light and dark, slow and fast, beautiful and ugly, it was all surrounded by music."
This guitar duo out of Chicago smacks and plucks the onomatopoeias out of their guitars to conjure up a musical karate. Follow their fleet fingers as filmed at The Zoo Bar.
In a dusty old barn on a farm near Denton, Neb., which serves as a sort of adopted home for the band, Kill County performs a song about the loss of home.
Watch the San Francisco duo perform a new song intensely, impassionately, on the Slowdown stage.