Voices of kindness and common feeling sound strongly in the polyphony.
2
The fourth movement of the symphony gave promise of being a miracle of polyphony.
3
Instead, he turned to early music; to plainsong; and to the beginnings of polyphony.
4
They had enough strong voices to pull off six-part polyphony without showing the strain.
5
As this rural idyll unfolded, Coleridge discovered an imaginative polyphony that left Wordsworth rather cold.
1
After this we were able to get good concertedmusic for the opera.
2
There were plenty of dogs, though, and we had concertedmusic every night.
3
Of course, ever since concertedmusic began, there has been a musical leader of some kind.
4
She took the concertedmusic in the finale of the first act two whole bars before her time.
5
He has, besides, a certain dramatic gift, and the concertedmusic in 'La Gioconda' is powerful and effective.
Ús de polyphonic music en anglès
1
The old polyphonicmusic differed from the newer harmonic music in three respects:
2
It is where a very important style of polyphonicmusic began.
3
There have never lived greater masters than these in the art of polyphonicmusic.
4
He employed contemporary polyphonicmusic as a model for the harmony of the solar system.
5
But, there are some other facts: the European civilization invented the polyphonicmusic (the most advanced music).
6
The great Bach infused this into his fugues, the highest manifestation of the contrapuntal, or polyphonicmusic of old.
7
So, in the history of civilizations, sculpture developed early, after poetry, but with architecture, and before painting and polyphonicmusic.
8
The European polyphonicmusic is one of the results of the "marriage" between image and symbolic models in music.
9
This has led to impressive results like producing Bach chorals, polyphonicmusic with multiple instruments, as well as minute long musical pieces.
10
We are talking here about Christianity, open sea navigation, the heliocentric model of the Universe, polyphonicmusic, Newton's Mechanics, Quantum Mechanics and Relativity theory.
11
Unrhythmical singing could not always hold its own; and when polyphonicmusic came into public favor, secular airs gradually found their way into the choirs.
12
Polyphonicmusic of every sort had now to go for a while; monodic music was coming in.