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
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).
Uso de concerted music en inglés
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.
6
I still yearn to take my part in concertedmusic, and be one of those privileged to play Beethoven's string-quartettes.
7
The composer himself also, in fitting it for the Italian stage, made some changes in the concertedmusic and added several morceaux.
8
Adele Kletzinsky has published some violin works and other concertedmusic, as well as the usual amount of songs and piano pieces.
9
The Soulsbys sang three or four times-oneach occasion with familiar hymnal words set to novel, concertedmusic-andthen separately exhorted the assemblage.
10
Kate Oliver is responsible for some concertedmusic, while Alma Sanders has produced a piano trio, a violin sonata, and a piano quartette.
11
Three English ladies, Ellen, Rose, and Mrs. Bentson, figure in the play, but without dramatic purpose except to take part in some concertedmusic.