The HAUS was filled with performers of all different genres and majors, and their supporters, as Sessions @33 had their final live showcase of the school year.
Ava Burns, a junior music business major and social media manager for Sessions @33, said the showcase puts the spotlight on smaller artists.
“It’s a chance for Columbia students who maybe aren’t on the main stage to showcase their work at Manifest,” she said.
The showcase also helped promote Sessions @33, a live music showcase and multimedia series produced by students at Columbia in partnership with the campus radio station WCRX.
“We are the school’s music series, and Manifest is a big music event, so I think it’s really important that we have our own show to showcase to some students who haven’t been at our live events before,” Burns said.
Mel Eagleson, a sophomore music business major and the recruiter for Sessions @33, hopes the Manifest showcase will bring in more performers.
“Manifest helps put a spotlight on sessions and helps people know about it so we can find more people to bring in for sessions next semester,” Eagleson said.
It brought in new and returning performers like Phoebe Davis, who graduated last year.
Being back at Manifest felt “a little surreal and a little bit strange,” she said, adding that she was excited to see the diverse range of genres the showcase had to offer.
“I mean, it’s such a varied sort of lineup,” Davis said. “There’s really no other place where you could see someone like me and then see someone like Aiden or 180 mindset.”
Tom Joyce, a career advisor at the Career Center who manages Sessions @33, said he purposefully aimed for a diverse line-up.
“I got the input from a lot of the students about the different bands that submitted and I feel like we’re hitting every genre,” Joyce said. “We had an electro pop artist, we had hip-hop, we had full bands, and we had a singer-songwriter, so the energy is great.”
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