Wisp of musicalcriticism, pronounced by a lady at a Stadium concert.
2
But if literary criticism forbids association between Humperdinck's two operas, musicalcriticism compels it.
3
It could have been from my teenage reading of the musicalcriticism of George Bernard Shaw.
4
It was always touch and go whether this summer plunge into musicalcriticism wouldn't bore him frightfully.
5
I have a strong desire to write a book, a little work on musicalcriticism with illustrative examples.
6
But, measured by his own day and age, Clementi deserves the pedestal on which musicalcriticism has placed him.
7
While he was waiting to form an opinion, Christophe tried to find out something about it from musicalcriticism.
8
Her specialty was musicalcriticism, to which, having been thrown a good deal with artists, she had added art criticism.
9
The homoeopathic formula, like cures like, may be adapted to musicalcriticism at least so far as to say that like touches like.
10
Or they may fit themselves for dramatic or musicalcriticism, or advertisement writing, which pays enormously but is not as easy as it sounds.
11
All my articles of musicalcriticism, lately published by L. Ramann under the title of "Essays" (Breitkopf and Hartel, Leipzig), were written in French.
12
Musicalcriticism, so far as I can see, is the least intelligent of the criticisms on this score.
13
Bull began with musicalcriticisms.
14
'No,' he said; 'the musicalcriticism is too rotten.'
15
You have noted in late musicalcriticisms allusions to the "ghosts of themes" used in "Pelleas and Melisande,"-"Sound-wraiths wandering in air."
16
"Or musicalcriticism," Lute remarked, with no glance at all, but with a pointedness of present company that brought from O'Hay: