It was a distinctly Far Eastern piece of music, with the rhythmic drum beat and shrill melody of the snake charmer's flute. |
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He has a fine gift for melody, and it would be fair to say that melodic considerations drive the piece. |
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Dedicated to Balakirev, this piece has a lyrical melody with light fingerwork in the right hand. |
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Her voice sounded like pure music, a melody he'd forever be joyful to hear composed. |
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It's a rather chirpy little guitar-pop song with a melody that is strangely reminiscent of the Postman Pat theme tune. |
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Still, these are threads rather than a dialogue until the piano plays an infectious melody around which the music weaves a joyous romp. |
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Her fingers danced skillfully on the taut strings, creating an intricate melody. |
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As soon as his fingers hit the notes in the song, the melody seemed quite familiar. |
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That said, you may not be able to remember a single melody to any one of these songs after a week, but maybe that's not the point. |
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Even if the basic chords are unchanged, the melody almost inevitably adds passing notes which effectively alter the chords. |
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Copland, of course, owed a lot to the Russian Stravinsky, but not his sense of melody, embedded in the American vernacular. |
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Not only has he inherited his father's gift for effortless melody, but his tenor is also imbued with Caetano's sturdy character. |
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They do display a keen sense of melody and song arrangement, but being better than all the other emo bands still isn't saying much. |
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His supreme gift for melody is readily apparent in his keyboard works, just on a smaller scale than found in his orchestral and vocal works. |
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Shadows Collide with People marks the point at which Frusciante brings his gift for melody and proper songs to his own work. |
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Stock is stronger with structure, rhythm, harmony and tonal effect than he is with melody. |
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She possesses a powerful voice, intelligent lyrics, excellent musicianship and a clear gift for melody. |
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In addition, David says melody and rhythm are most important to him in composing music. |
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They've got such a strong grasp of melody, rhythm and harmony and every single song on this latest album withstands repeated plays. |
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Having said that, there is some evocative background to most of the mixes and they do show the plain gift for melody that Reich has. |
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Also included is the Hungarian composer Zoltan Kodaly, a master of melody and of his country's folklore. |
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The Italians Rossini and Donizetti had a real gift for melody, a natural theatrical instinct and, more often than not, great wit. |
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Consistently elevating each of these fourteen tracks above the clones are the pair's ear for melody and sense of musical humor. |
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He's always had a gift for melody and texture, obviously, but how these components work against his drums is what I'm always listening for. |
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Also, in bar 5 the bass is in thirds with the melody while in all other versions it is in sixths. |
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Milhaud approved the work, made his comments, and then requested that Trimble write ten harmonizations of the same melody for the next week. |
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The band will probably branch out into new musical areas, like melody and proper chord progression. |
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The haze of sound he creates actually does activate those harmonics and their subtle movement is the real melody of the music. |
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It has been said that in Schubert's music the melody stands for life and the harmony for death. |
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I also encourage students to focus on how the melody and harmony interrelate, particularly in homophonic textures. |
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Voicing in many pieces is made more advanced by placing the melody in the same hand as many moving sixteenth notes or triplets. |
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Accordingly, harmony becomes the fundamental texture of music, and melody a more superficial constituent. |
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Possibly the lack of harmonic padding between the melody and bass lines meant that there was more inclusive space for other adjacent sounds. |
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As with the chord of the diminished seventh in the past, these bring a new colour to the melody and the harmony. |
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Andrew can pick out a lovely melody but his harmonies often seem out and he's better with melodies than he is with rhythms, for the moment. |
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When music is recognizable, as in a melody with a traditional harmonic accompaniment, we experience reassurance. |
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The lyrics are intelligent and engaging, while the music has more melody than the typical metal record. |
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The pieces are predominantly romantic in style with an emphasis on attractive, tonal melody. |
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But that life had still been familiar and reassuring, like the quiet roar of the passing cars and the sweet melody of the songbirds in the trees. |
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The rhythm, harmony and melody of the music are drawn from the sounds of nature, mixed with the cadence of the Gaelic language. |
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Trickling streams nearby added to the tranquility of this hidden paradise, joining in sweet melody with the bird's songs. |
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His name was Marc Saison, and to hear it pronounced from his own delicately full lips gave it such sweet melody it charmed one's ears. |
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On the other line I could hear the soft melody of music, slow lyrics playing out over the telephone line. |
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Whereas popular music relies almost entirely on melody, classical music has development and argument. |
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The music is devoid of melody, at least in the traditional sense, but it can grab the listener as tightly as any Big Tune, if given the chance. |
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Instead of seeking melody, listeners grew satisfied with crump-crump rhythm. |
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Apparently, Mandarin speakers also use the right temporal lobe which is used to process melody in music and speech. |
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Yet, unlike so many other releases, rather than focusing on the sweetness and melody of pop music, Massimo seems to be grasping for rock instead. |
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He believes that there's currently a move in British music towards better melody and lyrics. |
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Like some private soundtrack the sweet melody of humpback whales singing accompanied us as the day wore on. |
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Mehlan is a sharp melodist, and when he brings his full arsenal to bear on a simple melody, the effect is magnificent. |
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As the verses flowed from memory, he closed his eyes, concentrating on the words and melody. |
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She had a samba groove done by a Brazilian human beatbox and wondered if I could come up with a melody or something. |
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Settings are for three or four voices, mainly syllabic and homophonic, with the melody in the top voice. |
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Voters were told to consider among other items melody, lyrics, some historical reason, and even sentimental motives. |
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What You Waiting For is the benchmark for the album, immediately enjoyable with its fast lyrics and catchy melody. |
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His pieces are too monotonous in rhythm and weak in melody to be really interesting, and his experiments in tonality are indecisive. |
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The feathery pianissimo lightness in the upper strings against the mezzo forte melody lower down is perfectly weighted. |
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Even with the roaring falls, you could still hear the sweet melody of the birds and the rustling leaves by the wind. |
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After a few builds and falls, the scherzo gives way to a gorgeous, lush melody of a kind normally associated with Rachmaninoff. |
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The men begin singing Shalom Aleichem, swaying with the rise and fall of the melody. |
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The next song, the title track, melds another downtempo beat with a gentle guitar melody. |
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The piece requires the player to shift the focus of the melody line from the treble to the bass. |
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For them, the call of each of these birds is distinct, with its own melody, structure, pitch, base and treble. |
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Without pause, the finale begins with strings slashing through the drumming, followed by woodwind trills and a skipping melody. |
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An early example of 'shredding', but with a sense of melody that most shredders lack. |
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Serious tuneage, the melody just hunts you down until your pinched into a corner with no escape route in sight. |
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He was a vast hulk of a man, who hummed a tuneless melody to himself as he lumbered down the corridors. |
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In a good mood once again, he hummed a tuneless melody and headed back for his room. |
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A blast of melody rang throughout the crowd, and immediately everyone began to dance around, grabbing the nearest person to be their partner. |
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Briefly, this symbol signifies a harmonic connection between two notes in a melody. |
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Birds twittered and snapped up the insect life that failed to scurry away, their songs filling the air with brilliant melody. |
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Sure, she and partner Pete McCracken have a way around melody that's as silvery and clear as cold water. |
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Eventually, everyone sang along with the flowing melody while moving about the room in syncopation. |
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In its most common meaning, the term idea is used as a synonym for theme, melody, phrase or motive. |
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The lead single 'Modern Driveway' has a dreamy motorik energy and an ultra-emotive melody. |
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But its slices of summery California melody are so well-executed it's easy to forgive the disc's occasional swerves into syrupy sentiment. |
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The tune and the lyrics are simple and uncomplicated, yet it has an infective rhythm and melody. |
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The typical MIDI file is a multi-track song file that has separate parts for melody, bass, accompaniment, percussion and so forth. |
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A high-frequency whine electrifies the track throughout while several multi-tracked guitars try to cough up a creaky melody. |
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The two read out lines from Srinivas' number peppered with Sanskrit slokas and punctuated with melody. |
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Unoriginal soundtracky slop that sacrifices story and melody for statement and style. |
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A simple harmonized melody for singing the unmetrical texts, principally the psalms and the canticles, of Anglican services. |
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Playful articulation with staccato, legato, slurs and the shape of the rising first-theme melody in C major create a bright and fresh mood. |
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The light tunes of the rough Russian interpreted jazz sung up and down to the beats of a symphonic, unpracticed melody. |
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Flute, fiddle and pipes take the melody, above driving guitar and bouzouki rhythms, with vocals in stirring three or four-part harmony. |
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The Sama Veda differs from other Vedas in that it is chanted with some melody. |
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Mears snakily threads melody, then tears into the reed, taking the clarinet into the other world. |
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It was like the notes in a song, with its ups and downs, a melody that he would never tire of. |
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Frisell often takes a back seat, echoing the melody lines or soloing in spare, minimalist phrases that resolve in undulating chords. |
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The other girl sang in a clear soprano that weaved its way through the flute's melody and soared through the audience. |
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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. |
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Instead of returning to the original melody, they play a countermelody against the vamp. |
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The lovely Andante sostenuto is also very well managed with a particular singing melody attributed to the strings, who play with dreamy charm. |
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The haunting melody drifted up towards them, sounding eerily like to an owl hooting at nighttime. |
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His music is readily approachable, engaging the heart in pleasant groves of melody all overhung with verdure of lush orchestration. |
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They realize the inherent reliability of hooks and melody and of strong verses and even stronger choruses. |
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For most people these days, melody is not a cool thing, but for me, the Stones, Fleetwood Mac, Aerosmith, they were all about big choruses. |
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The second verset of the Kyrie, for example, is a fugue on the reed stops based on the chant melody. |
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Multiple guitars and vibes unwind a skeletal melody into nothingness while a lonesome organ drones sadly against the silence. |
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They are adept at creating an exquisite line in melody that's deep in emotion and rich in vibrancy. |
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The great vocal melody is still there, and the arrangement on the album fits the theme of the song. |
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Lippa's music, though idiomatic, is not rich in melody, depending largely on rhythm and harmony. |
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A classic and one of the most poignant tracks on the album, boasting swinging melody lines and sweet vocals. |
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He still likes arty guitar noodling, but he also hasn't given up on melody. |
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The tradition of singing the Nunc Dimittis, albeit with a different melody, comes from the Medieval Period. |
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There are no hooks, choruses and sometimes little in the way of melody, but it's an example of an album that I could imagine anyone enjoying. |
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This is a refined, sweetly oaked, pleasantly old-fashioned red that lingers on the palate like a melody in an echo chamber. |
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The skilful use of obligato, the counter melody flowing around the main melody, is an unfailing attraction of his music. |
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These songs have set the trend for melody and have evoked the nostalgia, which was fading into oblivion. |
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Indeed, it seems as though the melody and continuity suffered slightly at the hand of all these exclamation marks that Maestra Hewitt procured. |
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Combining the strengths of the giants along with a magical melody from Link's ocarina will yield a chance for the salvage of the world. |
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A canon for two voices using one line of melody is called a canon two in one, three voices with one melody a canon three in one, and so on. |
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Akerman recites this text against a background of the traditional cantorial melody for Kol Nidre, a prayer for Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. |
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His short cape blew along with the night wind, dancing to its melody as it sang through the desert. |
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What unites his music for all media is his individual use of melody and harmony often with a light touch. |
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They did not know that in music there are three basic elements of melody, harmony and rhythm. |
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Also, descending fourths appear in the accompaniment of the melody more than once. |
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The chord and respective melody movements are so genuinely perfect that they could make the hairs on your neck stand on end. |
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An energetic piece, it kept us safely apart while the banjo picker and the fiddler fought for dominance of the melody. |
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As he proceeds to end it all, the young man hears a haunting Mozart melody emanating from an open window. |
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I also loved the sophistication and harmony of jazz, the melody and, of course, the great solos that jazz cats played. |
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McLennan weighs in with The Statue, a blissful melody decorated with guitars that shimmer as though slowly emerging from a heat haze. |
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She can write an expansive melody that's well structured but isn't straitjacketed by chorus and verse. |
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A Catch or Round of the best type of Elizabethan times consisted of one melody, generally perfectly continuous. |
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On Painkiller, Griffin's soft falsetto floats above a catchy chorus and sweet pop melody. |
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Themes could be presented in different rhythms or metres, or with different orchestrations, or with slight changes in melody. |
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In an organum piece, a fragment of an older melody is slowed down to the point where it almost becomes a drone. |
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Guido's treatise Micrologus also explains how to sing a second voice accompanying a plainchant melody, creating two-part organum. |
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Modern classical is a term used as a prop by people who can't create an original melody! |
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Hasse begins with a simple melody which is varied and embellished with intricate ornaments that make it memorable. |
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It is raw, natural, with a distinct style, yet the underlying melody comes out strong and clear. |
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Although his left hand had stopped moving, his right was still quietly strumming the melody. |
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I listened for the first few times around, then began strumming a counter melody. |
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The drums die away for the last minute of the track and fade into what sounds like a guitar strumming along to a keyboard melody. |
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At the end, the same six pitch-classes provide the concluding hexachord of the tranquil violin melody. |
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The intro was played softly and her voice was high and sweet, singing the melody. |
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So the drums are the stars for a change, while the melody provides a haunting backdrop. |
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It begins with Gregorian chant-like background vocals then adds an ominous, vaguely classical, chugging brass melody. |
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The fusion of Indian melody of the Hindustani variety and steady-paced jazz-rock beats is uplifitng. |
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Its melody, very Middle Eastern in tone, overlies a dissonant harmony that gives it a spooky feel without being too jarring. |
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They reshape the festive polyrhythms of a village, a street sound, a rhythm-and-blues tune, or a folk melody into solos, suites, and symphonies. |
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At first he was reluctant to accept my aid but once I played a soothing and pacific melody from my flute his spirit was calmed. |
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In the Polonaise, Gourari raps out the opening chords defiantly, and the main melody is shaped with both arrogance and tenderness. |
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However, when the chordal melody is doubled in both hands, the left-hand part can be difficult to navigate cleanly. |
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After that all I remember is sleep and the soft melody humming in my little ears. |
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They look on passagework as passagework, but I Iook on it as decorated melody which has its own patterns and sensitivities. |
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Widowed, and with a little child, he felt violent pangs of transient remorse, and hymned his dead wife in vintage Nineties poet's minor melody. |
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Vibraphone and bass sketch the hymnal melody, joined by lush violin figures and soft digital crackle. |
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We can also benefit from our African brothers and sisters when it comes to hymnody, song and melody. |
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Like other hymnographers, Shnorhali created both the melody and the text, and chanted the music he authored. |
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However, hit the pause button before then, and you could probably sing the simple chorus melody before you even hear it. |
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There is some lively melody, an intense climax, and a quiet ending to the movement, which is marked Lento. |
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A gentle drumbeat begins clunking out of the speakers, along with a simple, tinny, synthesized melody. |
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Penillion is soaked in the Welsh tradition of improvised vocal descants to the harper's melody. |
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To create each song in the collection, a traditional melody was carefully selected for each poem chosen in the final draft. |
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In addition, they decided to emphasise melody rather than go for rhythmic fanfaronades. |
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All around them the bandits waited on horseback, except for Calderon who sat on the gypsy wagon's seat whistling a calming melody to his horses. |
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A melody tumbles from Connors' hands with hints of processing and wah-wah to make a tone that bubbles up from some waterlogged dream. |
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Tashakawa suggested that David should be appointed as official lullaby maker at bedtime, and morning melody waker upper, flutewise. |
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The left-hand plays broken chords most of the time or has a walking bass pattern, while the right-hand carries the melody. |
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It is a gentle, almost languid waltz, with a simple melody, and even simpler harmonies and construction. |
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Allyson paused, listening to the soft melody, a shy smile spreading over her wan features. |
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Langorous horns, ticking guitars and muted keyboards have been added, sketching out long, graceful arcs of melody over the bubbling rhythms. |
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What You Want is a sweet love song, with some lazy Burt Bacharach style horns floating over the melody. |
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Rachmaninoff indicates that the tenor carries the melody by placing accents over each of its notes. |
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The strings are used only to accent the melody, and any misgivings are quickly redeemed by yet another amazing guitar solo. |
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The first verse is followed by a short chorus, where the piano doubles the melody with the synth accenting the first note. |
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His voice softens and opens up, threading a tremulous quaver through its easy melody. |
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When students attempted to play the accompaniment to the artist's melody, they were hampered by not knowing the notes well enough. |
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I wondered what he was thinking as we swayed to the melody of softly playing lutes, harps, and lyres. |
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Every morning and evening songbirds gave us a glorious symphonic performance rich in harmony, melody and a few jazzy solos. |
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Underscoring their eccentricity and quirky jiggery-pokery is an ability to crack out a memorable pop melody. |
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The hall was full of the laughter of the courtiers and the joyous melody of the band. |
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The source of this parallel intoning of liturgical melody may be traced to the natural range of the human voice. |
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She began the lyrical melody, her fingers flowing over the keys without thought, her body swaying to the lilting melody of the music. |
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The notes flowed together like a stream of melody, and the tune was surprisingly more soulful than her rendition. |
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Much of it is recitative, a music of raw emotion, the cry of the heart without a melody. |
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Other pieces offer the barest wisps of melody, relying on the group's ability to generate structure spontaneously. |
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The song rambles on without a single redeeming characteristic or the slightest hint of a melody. |
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On the other hand, Sephardic versions of Kol Nidre vary both in melody and performance practice from one community to the next. |
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A veteran DJ listened hard and found magic, effectively an alchemist of rhythm and melody. |
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Every song here is tuneful, with a carefully crafted melody and production style. |
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Weil takes the reins on the melody and the chaos seems controlled when he's in command. |
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It is a simple ballad with a choirboy singing a melody over a xylophone and soft string orchestral backing. |
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The title track is even an evocative melody reminiscent of early Portishead. |
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The melody in the tenor part was also often repeated, but not always to synchronize with the rhythmic repeat. |
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A short melody, usually in the bass, repeated continually with changing upper parts. |
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A student who has a solid grasp of rhythm and pulse is much more likely to correctly notate the pitches of a melody. |
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This topic is relevant because music is more than just voice, rhythm, beat, melody but lyrics. |
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The band is stingy with its arrangements, bringing in the simplest bits of melody or rhythm only at the most necessary moments. |
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Since lyrics consist of three things, words, melody and rhythm, each one is considered separately. |
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Rather than drag out a seductive melody until it eventually becomes tawdry, the longest song on Be With is a Lilliputian four minutes. |
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And from its midst rises the rhythm and lilt and melody and meaning of words. |
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The melody was at times slow and lilting, and other times fast-paced and merry. |
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A simple accompaniment serves as a baseline from which a limpid melody explodes into a dizzy display of vocal pyrotechnics. |
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Folk songs work well, but pop music of any kind or any period will do as long as it has relatively simple melody lines. |
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Simon manages to imply whole whirling masses of emotional upheaval in but a few words and lines of melody. |
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In the finest folk tradition, the melody lines are long and abundantly worded. |
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Songwriter and singer Ollie Cole has an impeccable ear for a good melody and this one lives long in the mind. |
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Eventually the drums and bass drop out completely, and we're left with dual arpeggiating guitars gently supporting a relaxed sax melody. |
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Each selection has been arranged as a piano solo with melody and accompaniment. |
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The melody, ascending into the upper registers for the chorus, punctuates the emotion in the lyrics. |
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Tim is humming the melody of some ambiguous rock song and staring at the crumbling, ashy end of the cigarette. |
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My mom wound it up every night and it plinked its way though the melody until I fell asleep. |
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It was then that I heard an eerie melody upon the air, from a lute, or other stringed instrument. |
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She focused intently at it and as she watched, Doremi could see the figure inside begin to move and pluck a melody on the strings of the lute. |
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The solo instrumental part, in the treble clef, has a melody line characterised by a falling figure, often an augmented fourth. |
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For those who don't know it it's a fabulous song based on a naive melody and a haiku like lyric. |
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Melody after melody, lyric after lyric, song after song emerged, far more than she either needed or knew what to do with. |
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Her hips punctuate the bass tala, her hands move like the suvit's serpentine melody, the rest of her dances with the flute and govind. |
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Both the melody and the four-part harmonisation are printed as facsimile reproductions of the composer's autograph manuscript. |
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The lead instrument, the prima, the smallest of the group of tamburitzas carries the melody. |
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She was humming to herself an enchanting melody, and the young Count stood there entranced by the fair young maiden. |
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Bach later incorporated this cantata's beautiful final movement, a concerted setting of the same chorale melody, into his St. John's Passion. |
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The melody slid smoothly along, minor chords predominating, building on a soft, tentative base of gentle violins and cellos. |
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In fact, compared to the honesty and melody of Ritter's songs, Irish Country looks like manufactured pop. |
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They even had the basic melody written out on a few sheets of manuscript paper. |
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It's written in a kind of pastiche nineteenth-century style, complete with faux-Spanish exotic syncopations, melody and harmony. |
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Pianist Damon Denton scampers through Shostakovich's figurations with a keen ear for melody and texture. |
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The thematic material derives from Catalan folk melody and as the movement progresses its character emerges more strongly. |
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The central melody evolves around a minimal theme reminiscent of random melodies played on wind chimes. |
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Only the bass line and six bars of melody had survived, possibly from the slow movement of a Trio Sonata. |
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It begins with the bass stating the melody and features a shifting arrangement that allows everyone a chance to solo. |
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Halfway through the bass takes over the melody and allows the listener a delectable bridge portion to the song. |
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The drums lightly tap, the second guitar plays the main melody, and the bass doubles the second guitar. |
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It's got a nice bit which is either a bassline or a guitar melody, I'm unsure which. |
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I mostly love the music, the jangly guitar intro and the cool bassline and the vocal melody. |
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The band has a tight grip on melody, mixing dreamy guitar work with crashing drums and painfully self-aware lyrics. |
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The vibraphone offers a misty rendition of the melody after the accordion, followed by a guitar section senza battuta, and then violin a battuta. |
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Perhaps the '70s band that had the biggest effect on me, ELO instilled in me a partiality for melody that has never subsided. |
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Mendelssohn's melody forms a self-contained, cadentially closed unit, a little garden of its own. |
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The second movement is rather quiet, with long melodic lines and some striking melody. |
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The horizontal banding of the town hall invites us to note breaches in the anticipated pattern much as we register modulations of a familiar melody. |
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A department store piano melody plays in the background while he admires everything he can see. |
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There he was, mopping the deck after that freak storm that had just hit, whistling a bawdy melody that he'd heard in a barroom once, when he spotted her. |
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Short and stylistically different than much of the rest of the album, it features Hayden in top vocal form, gently wrapping his words around a meandering piano melody. |
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The band prefers to keep things very understated, but they never skimp on melody or song structure, which, though simple, doesn't fail to captivate. |
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In fact, it's thought that the mathematical structure embedded in the rhythm and melody of music is what our brains latch on to, and that this is why we enjoy listening to it. |
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She was always good at repetition, at combining melody and harmony and rolling them over into country drone, but Rawlings is replaced here on half the tracks by a fiddle. |
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His fingers danced across the holes of the chanter creating the melody. |
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He informs us that, when listening to records, it is the beat he hears first, that it has primacy over the melody or lyrics. |
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Erik is a mere operatic tenor lover, and his cavatinas have tunefulness enough, without a trace of the warmth of melody which characterises Wagner's later works. |
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The swooping and soaring melody, very Eastern in its melismatic cut, is punctuated and embellished by the other three string instruments and by the piano. |
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The minute the melody started, Kirstin's eyes were already watery. |
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At the next lesson Milhaud essentially approved the work after a few comments and suggestions, then requested that Trimble harmonize the melody for the next lesson. |
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He has made little jewels of melody and elegant settings to surround them. |
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A simple acoustic guitar melody begins to play accompanying his voice. |
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This is a language I can understand, music with a melody I can whistle. |
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It means he can hum a popular melody in the tune of other songs. |
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If the repetition is only in the melody, with changed harmony, it is called a melodic sequence, and if the repetition is followed also in the harmony, a harmonic sequence. |
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The music seems to have somehow entered me, and as I stare into Maxim's clear blue eyes, the emptiness inside has become filled with the airy consistency of the melody. |
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That same, simple melody played by a single trumpet might be beautiful, but the message conveyed and resulting impact on the audience is not the same. |
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The score evolved unpremeditatedly out of the bluesy alto-saxophone melody at once sensuous and acrid, originally written separately as a piece of source music. |
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The software displays the recording's structure, identifying the notes by pitch as high and low notes, alerting the tone-deaf to where their melody fell apart. |
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Yet reading this novel, even a tone-deaf person could feel the delight and excitement that music enthusiasts experience when they hear an uplifting melody. |
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The song was slow, quiet, the notes stringing together perfectly to form a peaceful melody, one that left him wondering what words could be set to such beautiful music. |
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The simple melody derived from a pentatonic scale and the prevailing dotted rhythm in compound duple meter elicit the feeling of a slow, graceful Korean traditional dance. |
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At one point he then took out the aforementioned trumpet and played it with Satchmo-like raunch, singing the refrain in between the lines of melody. |
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As she began to play the refrain, a voice began to caress her melody. |
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It's got a solid bass riff, punchy drums and ear-catching sampled refrains, but could use either a melody or some rapping out front to give it focus. |
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The album is mainly middle-of-the-road reggae, heavy on drum and bass, and chock-full of melody lines that grab you right away and sound better with each listen. |
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The sea showed no longer a smooth and calm panorama, the waves dancing joyfully, for it had started a rousing melody, a robust song escaping from unruly waters. |
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The German term originally signified a plainchant melody sung chorally, but from the late 16th century its meaning was widened to include vernacular hymns. |
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The sweeping rise and fall of the melody settled softly into her mind. |
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The odd, wandering vocal melody appears and disappears spookily. |
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Emil Axelsson recreates the classic melody using only his fingers and their super-snapping abilities. |
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The melody delivered with minimal counterpoint is followed by a development with increased counterpoint, concluding with a spare restatement of the melody. |
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I was just experimenting with transposing a melody that I knew in my head to the guitar. |
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Music is expression of divine melody, the same with the poetry. |
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Aside from a couple of tracks, the funk-rock has by and large been replaced by sonic melody and harmonies that utilise synthesisers, overdubs and even Spanish guitars. |
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The revolving structure of the melody brings to mind minimalist composers Steve Reich and Philip Glass in its apparent simplicity, but subtle complexity. |
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He juggles multiple systems of rhythm, melody, structure and timbre. |
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They frequently claimed credit for songs, even when they had borrowed chords, melody and lyrics. |
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Whether it's in the form of romantic melody, upbeat Swing Jazz or exotic world rhythms, the live musical experience adds a unique presence and excitement to any event. |
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Once I've sampled it I can transpose it over six octaves, so if you write a whole melody with that one note going up and down the scale you get this amazing texture. |
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He touches softly at his guitar in that electric samba style, and his breathy croon winds the melody in and out of the occasional low swell of horns. |
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He also has an uncommon gift for melody and thoughtful lyrics. |
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Then, as I reclined in my bower, the fairies sang to me, and Oberon entered slowly, playing a soft rounded melody that interwove with their song, unnoticed by my eager guards. |
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Investigators observed that melody appears to act on the brain's emotional core, the limbic system, which moves us to joy, awe, peace, fear and sadness. |
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He probably heard the song during a Brazilian tour, and the melody simply stayed in his head. |
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Ge'ez is easily adapted to melody because each sign represents a syllable. |
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There's an odd melody that I remember not liking from when I saw the film, and it doesn't really work that well, although it's not too bad when it's mixed with dinosaur roars. |
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Carter's cello lends the proceedings an intimate chamber jazz feel, and his arco double stops bridge the gap between chordal and melody instrument. |
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They are forgettable not because they are boring, but because the chorus always hits with such a wave of hummable, nostalgic melody that it overpowers them, every time. |
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Today, it's very rare for the bass player to think he's only operating in the bass area of the sound spectrum and supporting the melody with harmonic changes. |
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The band evoke a pleasing mix of tunefulness, melody and hardcore grind. |
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The freedom of art, of the poet to act or speak, is controlled by the surface beauty of specific juxtapositions and diversions created by the melody or assonance of language. |
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British English, however it may have sounded in Shakespeare's day, has acquired a poetry-enhancing speech melody that tuneless, flat American cannot match. |
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Second, the student is able to play melody and harmony simultaneously. |
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The role of the person who is learning to improvise is to make up just one simple part, such as an ostinato or a new melody or a variation to the basic rhythm. |
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The way that I work piece by piece, I write as I go and one melody might instigate a counter melody and the emotional nature of a song might inspire the lyrical content. |
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Seven minutes down the line, the track suddenly breaks up entirely to let a secondary melody take over, before the whole machinery is put in motion again. |
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I heard the twang of guitar strings, and a little melody ensued. |
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With the gentle twang of the lutes, the lively melody started. |
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It came to land on his shoulder and continued to tweet its melody. |
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It is to be found in the basso ostinato, a repeated bass line over which a keyboard player or lutenist improvises chords and a singer or player evolves a melody. |
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Carter's pizzicato chording shadows Dolphys' statement of the melody before the leader lets rip with a solo crammed with trills, soulful cries and mercurial bop runs. |
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In the first movement the oboe introduces the melody, quasi-ironic in its soupy neo-Romanticism, almost crass except that it avoids predictability, and is counterpointed. |
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The first full-scale dance melody was given an almost schmaltzy swing. |
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