The process is repeated, this time with horns providing counterpoint to the urgently strummed guitars. |
|
At some point the children chime in and finally a single soprano voice soars in counterpoint to the great roaring wave of harmony. |
|
As if in mournful counterpoint to his own grief, the boy heard the clear, sorrowful notes of an alto sax keening and sobbing out a blues melody. |
|
Upholstered burlap panels have been strategically used as a soft counterpoint. |
|
Now add into it, the principle of composition, in counterpoint, of so-called neighboring key, neighboring-key half-tone change. |
|
The live dancers perform alongside their own images on film, in unison or in canon or counterpoint. |
|
It is instantly recognizable from the counterpoint between the bass and drum downbeat, and the offbeat rhythm section. |
|
The scene's realism is a nice counterpoint to the more cartoonish, stylized violence of the finale. |
|
This should be a subtly sexy piece with flowing movement that acts as a counterpoint to the percussive orchestral castanets. |
|
Valen's approach was derived from Bach, from whose music he evolved a polyphonic technique of dissonant counterpoint. |
|
As Ross described her various enthusiasms, the conversation of the surrounding diners provided a counterpoint of urban dismay and aspiration. |
|
Traditional prosody describes the rhythm of poetry as the meaningful counterpoint of speech pattern against a fixed abstract meter. |
|
With the oven-baked vegetable kibbeh, apple slices provide crisp counterpoint to the grainy bulghur wheat. |
|
Peering into their world was a welcome counterpoint to the workaday routine of her own life. |
|
From the shadows came the sounds of a woman humming in counterpoint to the music. |
|
Her dexterity in passagework was matched by a good sense of the piano sonority and clarity of counterpoint. |
|
Here one could relish plateaus of stillness before the onset of bristling counterpoint and passagework in the finale. |
|
For counterpoint, see Society of the Spectacle sec. 158, though also passim. |
|
They are eaten with pates or cold collations, their gently acidic snap making a most pleasant counterpoint to the fatty meat. |
|
For a humorous counterpoint to Deacon's scholarly observations on the University of Michigan cases, check out Ann Coulter's latest column. |
|
|
And chords are groups of more or less consonant sounds which counterpoint has united! |
|
The plate glass windows of the boutiques offer a striking counterpoint to the blankets lying on the ground in the markets. |
|
He spent about a year of rigorous self-study fooling around with canons, fugues, invertible counterpoint, and so on. |
|
Because polyphony is restricted pop and rock music demonstrates limited harmony and use of counterpoint. |
|
At other times, dozens of them are laid on top of each other, creating not a rational counterpoint but instead the heady glossolalia of nature. |
|
His lack of a counterpoint reply can sometimes make Bam's labors seem pointless. |
|
They've had a big hit with a series called Witch, which is for 10 to 12-year-old girls, so this is going to be the counterpoint to that for boys. |
|
Her compositions were childish compared to the glories of baroque counterpoint. |
|
It also made a great counterpoint to the shamanic stuff I've been immersed in, as initiations so often feature a ritual death and resurrection. |
|
This counterpoint rhythm, of natural and man-made elements, alludes to both classical and modern musical forms. |
|
Providing linear counterpoint, simple designs stitched in black thread flow over and around the painted images. |
|
Williamson possesses a deep, sardonic baritone that makes for a curious counterpoint to his exuberant indie-pop dancercise routines. |
|
The Don's barely understood emotional meandering is the counterpoise and counterpoint to Kitri's rational love for Basilo. |
|
Now, admittedly this could be seen as a neat counterpoint to the national lottery, which is a tax on stupidity. |
|
On the other hand, the Journal-Constitution also brings us the counterpoint to his lucubrations. |
|
His interest in counterpoint is shown in a set of 120 canons, which use such techniques as augmentation, diminution, and retrograde motion. |
|
He is the brilliant madrigalist who is the secular counterpoint to Palestrina's career in the churches of Rome. |
|
The twin counterpoint battles of Imphal and Kohima at Burma's gateway to India comprised long marches through dense jungles by both sides. |
|
But today they highlight Charles' sheer musical eclecticism, and vitally counterpoint his earlier earthier style. |
|
However, the decay on real xylophones and marimbas is so long that the counterpoint gets muddied. |
|
|
The game's biggest weakness is its lack of any levity or humor to counterpoint the story's overwhelmingly serious tone. |
|
Ian Storey is a wonderfully swaggering Pinkerton and his powerful baritone proves the perfect counterpoint to Butterfly's swooning. |
|
A faint, high pitched whine grew and began to pulse through the ship, a counterpoint to the deeper thunder of the turbines. |
|
As if to counterpoint the tension, a rollicking square-dance-inspired tune by Smith's sister, Soozie Tyrell, fills the room. |
|
The wild, syncopated patterns of the surrounding painting become giant frames which counterpoint the stillness of the images. |
|
I want you to talk a lot about this because it's the counterpoint to what lots of others have said. |
|
The Holland group's taut interlocks and quick, nervous counterpoint become a shade tiresome. |
|
The counterpoint becomes increasingly intricate as the set progresses, but Frescobaldi never lets the music devolve into academic dryness. |
|
Greenfield's self-making depends neither on euphonies nor on arguments, but on a counterpoint of sentences, a music of grammar. |
|
Regrettably, the counterpoint to that dominance is a tendency to relapse into aggressive and uncivilised patterns of behaviour from time to time. |
|
Joe is the counterpoint to David, with a programmed love that is all simulation, and can be turned off as well as on. |
|
The mobilization of the so-called lower castes and classes may provide an important counterpoint to dreams of a majoritarian India. |
|
And that belief came from ideas that saw greatness as the counterpoint to everyone else's lack of it. |
|
We find also a fascination with Baroque counterpoint and modal melodies from Gregorian chant to Appalachian folk tunes. |
|
Ned is a meteorologist devoted to science and logic, the counterpoint to his sister and her belief in curses and irrational fate. |
|
We produce the effect of counterpoint by juxtaposing lineal periods with grammatical periods. |
|
There is a delightfully odd, twangy soundtrack, which plays counterpoint to the otherworldly feel of the rest of the film. |
|
Normally his family life, with lecturer wife Paula and two teenage children, is a nice counterpoint to the mayhem and misery his work uncovers. |
|
It's the subsequent addition of multi-tracked vocal counterpoint, maracas, and vibes that turns it into a delectable piece of ear candy. |
|
It appears to be a simple performance but one full of richness and stands as the counterpoint to the work done by James Stewart. |
|
|
If she conceives of it as a fugue, she uses techniques of counterpoint and fugal structure to make the piece. |
|
The drawings have a Photo-Realist literalness, and a dense, satiny gloss accenting edges and shadows in a masterful counterpoint of tonal values. |
|
More important, Moravia's novels offer a bracing counterpoint to today's soft-hearted and headed fiction. |
|
A counterpoint to Das Wunder, it is abstractly overpainted with arabesques of yellow and white and ornamented with a garland of the eyes that figure in its title. |
|
Blanchett achieves this through a level of nuanced physical and aural orchestration that brims over with virtuoso counterpoint. |
|
It is characterized by a greater licence in the use of counterpoint, and by a lavish use of passaggi and acciaccature to express the affetti of this modern music. |
|
In some respects, Yale presents a counterpoint, where secret societies are not a huge party scene and keep a low profile. |
|
But his many piercing performances provide a counterpoint to his embarrassing legal troubles. |
|
As a counterpoint to the latter, mountains rise in tiers against a hirameji ground, suggesting twilit distances in the manner of landscapes in Yamato-e style paintings. |
|
The melody delivered with minimal counterpoint is followed by a development with increased counterpoint, concluding with a spare restatement of the melody. |
|
Alkan rarely compromises the logic of his counterpoint, and a similar inflexibility was noted in his playing, which avoided the indulgent rubato of many of his contemporaries. |
|
The tender, juicy asparagus provides a counterpoint to the fried food. |
|
With their use of tone rows and dense counterpoint these pieces should dispel any ideas that Ives's music is just about jaunty marches and musical borrowings. |
|
It's the spirituality and soul of the blues filtered through barbershop harmonies, but accompanied in counterpoint by dehumanized pulses and drones. |
|
His ecstatic, harmony-drenched odes to sunshine, surfboards, girls and cars played like a Californian counterpoint to the opening bars of Beatlemania. |
|
They serve as an important contemporary counterpoint to the cases below that are devoted to Africa's long history of agriculture, metallurgy, and ceramic production. |
|
The second movement is polyrhythmic counterpoint in mixed meters. |
|
It provides a nice contemporary counterpoint to the previously posted Christmas Scenes, and Smith's reflections on the whole shebang resonate with me, anyway. |
|
They're usually quoted only as a counterpoint to the bigoted bigmouth. |
|
It was a conscious construction, an amalgam of Middle Eastern melismata and rhythms, Renaissance modality, and, oddly enough, Baroque counterpoint. |
|
|
The treatments, however, differ startlingly, Flos campi owing less to traditional counterpoint and more to a vision of simultaneous planes of sound. |
|
As a counterpoint to these navally oriented papers, he considers the complication for defence planning introduced by the steadily developing capability of air forces. |
|
Functioning as both a commentary and counterpoint to the center text, excerpts from the Gothic short stories of Edgar Allan Poe run along the left side of the page. |
|
Like Wagner's overture, this movement is a Romantic ode to Classical counterpoint, and one at times seems to hear actual Wagner themes peeking out from behind the curtain. |
|
Elongated roars and fragments of voices gave a sense of atmospheric portent, while syncopated pings, clicks and chirps added a desultory counterpoint. |
|
Lutheran chorales were so often the basis of Bach's counterpoint, and Wagner devised for his Nuremberg mastersingers a counterpoint that was both traditional and contemporary. |
|
Otherwise, composing instruction in the mid-19th century seems to have stuck stubbornly to a mixture of figured bass and so-called strict counterpoint. |
|
Bernstein studied harmony and counterpoint with Walter Piston at Harvard. |
|
The euro will become a powerful counterpoint to the US dollar, and beside these two powerful currencies the Australian dollar looks increasingly vulnerable. |
|
My cod with chorizo is a tried-and-tested combination, with the strong taste of the chorizo providing a pleasing counterpoint to a succulent piece of cod. |
|
With our invariably simplistic tendency to summarize any given issue into Good vs. Bad, the courts are held up as the primary counterpoint to the criminal element of society. |
|
Also, the underlayer of cement primer makes the ochre-gold acrylic surface look gritty and holds the tendency towards the decorative in counterpoint. |
|
In his most recent works, the artist negotiates, afresh, the counterpoint between city and landscape, home and world, that has long exercised him. |
|
Subjects are pink, countersubjects are blue, free counterpoint is green, and episodes are yellow. |
|
The painting is a pleasant counterpoint to his earlier works. |
|
The first movement is filled with inventive counterpoint, lovely melodics and rich pungent harmonies that call to mind French impressionism. |
|
Radial symmetry is often used as a counterpoint, though its use in interior design is less frequent that the first two methods. |
|
The introduction of the tea ceremony emphasised simplicity and modest design as a counterpoint to the excesses of the aristocracy. |
|
The independent motions of different parts sounding together constitute counterpoint. |
|
He continued to be engrossed in music, and in Jacksonville he met Thomas Ward, who became his teacher in counterpoint and composition. |
|
|
Baroque music is characterized by the use of complex tonal counterpoint and the use of a basso continuo, a continuous bass line. |
|
The dressing is a refreshing counterpoint to the spicy chicken. |
|
He hopes it will stand as a counterpoint to the divisiveness of extremism. |
|
Another grace note in Saison Brett are the 38 IBUs worth of American hops, providing a nice counterpoint to the Belgian character. |
|
Rothschild's undercutting commentary arrives through counterpoint. |
|
Not only a father figure, but the creative counterpoint to the narrator, Berline wishes to spend some time with the younger man. |
|
A cold salad with French string beans is the perfect counterpoint. |
|
The music works in counterpoint to the images on the screen. |
|
For a counterpoint to its molar-tingling sweetness, you might try a glass of doogh, the Persian yogurt drink, bracingly tart with a high note of dill. |
|
Works of classical repertoire often exhibit complexity in their use of orchestration, counterpoint, harmony, musical development, rhythm, phrasing, texture, and form. |
|
For Athanasius Kircher, for instance, the term clearly applies to a composer's imaginative approach to abstract counterpoint, such as in canons and ricercare. |
|
After Holst left school in 1891, Adolph paid for him to spend four months in Oxford studying counterpoint with George Frederick Sims, organist of Merton College. |
|
This correction is necessary to understand the passage, perh aps the only technical comments we have by Palestrina on the subject of counterpoint. |
|
Harmony is the end result of counterpoint, and figured bass is a visual representation of those harmonies commonly employed in musical performance. |
|
His extrovert craziness is an interesting counterpoint or safety valve to the ethos of prayerful silence and traditional solemnity which is so much part of Orthodox identity. |
|
Scheidemann's frequent use of imitation at the inversion, and of regular countersubjects, reveals a concern with the types of counterpoint described in the treatises. |
|
In spite of the name, the style often has a fast and happy rhythm, characterized by virtuosity, improvisation, subtle modulations and full of syncopation and counterpoint. |
|