Since then he has had widespread experience, both as a guest soloist with major orchestras and as a solo recitalist. |
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Brindley Sherratt, the bass soloist to whom much of the important recitative is consigned, conveyed the drama excellently. |
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The very good friend of mine who happened to also be my soloist partner for this performance is allergic to cigarette smoke. |
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Her debut as a soloist was at the age of 11, playing the famous Mendelssohn Concerto in E minor. |
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The soloist amply betrays his great love for this music, which he interprets with supreme artistry yet restrained enthusiasm. |
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The following week she flew to Las Vegas to begin rehearsals for her first eight-week stint as the lead soloist. |
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As soloist, leader Alan Smale stuck the perfect sweet tone without verging on the trite. |
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Guitar soloist Robin Nolan is the leader, accompanied by Kevin Nolan on rhythm guitar and by Paul Meader on bass. |
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The soloist rhapsodizes in quiet ecstasy, and the orchestra reacts torporously, but with increasing movement. |
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Toward the end of his life, he arranged the Lachrymae for soloist and string orchestra as a favor to Cecil Aronowitz. |
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Milne says her route to success as a soloist gives the lie to frequent claims that opera is an elitist art form. |
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The orchestra takes it up, dressed rather tawdrily before the soloist brings in a tender, slower contrast. |
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He is a fluid, elegant player who rejects the star soloist approach of many a saxophonist faced with the trio format. |
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Four Russian Peasant Songs is scored for soprano soloist, female voices and four horns. |
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The native of Berkeley, Calif., had had a sterling career as soloist, principal dancer and ballet master with American Ballet Theatre. |
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He gave a masterly account of the solo role in this work which makes huge demands on the soloist. |
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In particular, the bass soloist had a voice which seemed to rumble from the very bowels of the earth. |
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Its flowing melodic lines for trombone soloist build up strong emotional intensity. |
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There is only one round of bidding and the player who bids the highest number of points becomes the soloist. |
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The concerto demands athletic power from the soloist as he negotiates trickily angular and motoric passages, particularly in the last movement. |
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It starts with edgy trills from the soloist, but its overall direction of travel is into the silent darkness. |
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Over the last forty years, the free jazz legend seems to have been unfadingly present in diverse, exiting constellations, as well as a soloist. |
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The following illustrates barlines, brackets, and braces with a large orchestra that includes a piano soloist. |
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A regular soloist at the National Concert Hall, Scott has fans on both sides of the Atlantic. |
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During the 1920's, Stravinsky had often been heard as the soloist in his piano concerto. |
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By her second year she was dancing soloist roles in the Balanchine repertory. |
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It will include harpists, a soprano soloist accompanied by the flute and spinet and music by Mozart as well as other lesser-known composers. |
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Conklin has performed as a violin soloist with numerous orchestras including the Louisville, Nashville and Berlin Symphony Orchestras. |
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Although using a multi-choral arrangement, Vaughan Williams concentrates on three string groups and one soloist string quartet. |
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Father Purcell celebrated the Requiem Mass in Dunhill Church and the soloist was Margaret Moore. |
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The scoring is for cello soloist, percussionists, celesta, and chamber choir. |
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Perhaps the majority of her inspiration came from her mother, who was a soloist in the church choir and a skilled musical theater performer. |
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Stanzas can be sung by a soloist, choral group, or the whole assembly as required. |
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The refrain is easily learned by everyone and the leader part can be sung by a soloist or small choral group. |
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The orchestra takes its own stance leading the soloist towards an exciting close. |
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In the 1980s Paxton performed less frequently, usually as a soloist and in highly improvised works. |
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She will be a featured trombone soloist at a Lincoln Youth Symphony concert this spring. |
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A few years back, they needed a sub for the indisposed bass soloist in Samson. |
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For one thing, the programmes completed a Barbican cycle of Beethoven's piano concertos with the American soloist Richard Goode. |
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A superbly idiomatic collaboration between a virtuoso conductor and a stellar soloist! |
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He has served as orchestra conductor, piano soloist, composer and arranger. |
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Throughout the concerto, the soloist is put through his paces with miles of finger-bending figurations. |
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In 1995, she became a member of the corps de ballet and in 1997 was promoted to soloist. |
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She became a member of the corps de ballet in 1997, second soloist in 1999, and was immediately elevated to first soloist after her Onegin debut. |
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Garage artist Jamieson, featuring soloist Angel Blu, will join the festivities, beginning on Thursday with a huge foam party. |
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Each of the players was a skilful soloist, and they each gracefully merged their individual talents to create tight flowing ensembles. |
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The concerto soloist, a distinguished cellist, made an incorrect entry, and there was some untidy wind playing. |
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He appeared at Carnegie Hall as duettist and soloist and composed the Mars Ballet for his wife, the choreographer Albertina Rasch. |
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And like any soloist, she can't be everyplace at once, so she's trying to leverage her time. |
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During the summer months, she plays co-principal horn and is a featured soloist with the Capitol City Band. |
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He performs as soloist and accompanist and is a frequent adjudicator at piano festivals and competitions. |
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He's a nimble, accomplished soloist and a sensitive accompanist, capable of pastel washes, shimmering folky chords or juicy bop lines. |
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At length, the soloist and the orchestra meet on the same spiritual plane, a process aided by the quotation of the plainsong Adoro te devote. |
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The recording offers a natural concert balance rather than a spot-lit vehicle for the soloist, an ideal match for Hough's selfless virtuosity. |
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The structural subtlety of the concerto, with its conjoined movements, was adroitly handled by both orchestra and soloist. |
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Written for wind orchestra and soloist, this is less a partnership of equals than of antagonists, with much brittleness in the music. |
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On the same program soloist Robert Johnson's Five Loaves of Bread and Two Fish reached out in sinuous, endless curves that spoke of a different kind of quest. |
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When ENB brought its new revival of this production to the Coliseum, it laudably gave this most demanding role to the young Brazilian first soloist, Fernanda Oliveira. |
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Joining Aled and Pam to count down the nation's favourite carols are chart-topping singer Katherine Jenkins and world-famous classical soloist Andrea Bocelli. |
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Thus, after just a handful of bars of ritornello, delivered at a breakneck speed, the soloist enters at, and insists upon, a much more sedate and measured tempo. |
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Owen returned after the interval as soloist in Constant Lambert's Rio Grande, and the programme ended, for no very obvious reason, with Copland's Rodeo. |
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She has given noteworthy piano recitals as soloist and accompanist at Perth, Brunei, Singapore, Malaysia, New Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, and Bangalore. |
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Also a distinguished soloist and recitalist, he has shared the stage with many well-known orchestras and performed at numerous international music festivals. |
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Two antiphonal trumpets join the soloist to represent the Trinity. |
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The soloist also recorded a song in Bemba, Swahili and English that features the Necessary Noize twosome to be added on the Sling Family Volume One compilation. |
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The soloist and orchestra achieve wonderful clarity and fine ensemble. |
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Thus it was all the more unfortunate when the movement was interrupted by a memory lapse that necessitated a brief conference at the podium between soloist and conductor. |
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After the interval the soloist had changed from her strapless, formfitting glittering blue to a classical, double-tiered dress in subdued pastels. |
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Twenty-one solemn pieces and invocations to 95 saints were sung by a male soloist and the responses were delivered pitch perfect by a practised congregation. |
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The following season, as a first soloist, she again saved the day when she took over the principal roles of Clara and Juliet for two more injured ballerinas. |
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It is these characteristics that give these Mozart performances, with the violinist doubling as soloist and director of the OAE, such dash and vitality. |
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The soloist was the young Greek violist Alexandros Koustas, with the recently formed Blenheim Chamber Orchestra under the baton of their founder Daniel Cohen. |
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The movements are inspired by things very specific to the soloist. |
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Now they play fifteen to twenty concerts a year together, while Misha plays ninety to 100 other engagements as soloist, chamber musician or with symphonies. |
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Euzbek is a musician who was trained in classical Western music and sang as both a choralist and a soloist with the ystanbul State Opera. |
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Quiet and contemplative, and requiring little virtuosity from the soloist, the piece was slow to gain popularity among violists. |
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Since that time, almost every major international orchestra, conductor and soloist has performed at the Proms. |
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He was the soloist at another performance of the concerto just over a year later. |
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Lady Jeanne Galway is also an accomplished flutist, both as a soloist and chamber musician. |
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Peter Quint, a Chicago-based soloist who has performed on the Vieuxtemps several times, said it was unique. |
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Its hallmark was call and response, performed between a soloist and the rest of the workers in chorus. |
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Lisa Croudace, one of the soloists on clarinet, performed the Fughetta by Finzi and was a soloist not to be missed. |
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He has performed as a soloist, recitalist and chamber musician around the world, and as a frequent performer at The Castleton Festival. |
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He has won acclaim as a solo recitalist, soloist with orchestra and chamber musician on both national and international stages. |
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Watkins, who is from Cardiff, now lives in London and is an established soloist, recitalist and orchestral leader. |
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The start of the D major concerto K2 18 goes back to cheerful fanfaring, and the movement maintains a very active role for the soloist. |
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The soloist of the performance was Anna Kondratenko, concertmaster of the Macedonian Philharmonic Orchestra. |
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Eighth and sixteenth notes flow gently into a dual cadenza of scalic patterns, with the pianist given a moment to shine as a soloist at the end. |
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Ilet is the band's fire-crackling soloist, dedicatedly bringing along his flugelhorn alternative for what amounted to about a minute's usage. |
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That said, the sheer pent-up emotion of the cadenza and the release of the cadenza did both soloist and orchestra proud. |
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Dave Tarras was widely considered the technical wizard of the music, with quick trills and finger gymnastics that rivaled any classical soloist. |
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A restrained pastorale followed, with some great interplay between soloist and orchestra before more musical fireworks in the finale. |
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This concerto began with extended cacophony, then bitonal juxtapositions of the soloist to the orchestra, and an admixture of references to variety of musical genres. |
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Promoted last season from the corps to soloist, she shifts from percussive jazziness to supple lushness, zeroing in on musicality and choreographic intention. |
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John Beard appeared for the first time as one of Handel's principal singers and became Handel's permanent tenor soloist for the rest of Handel's life. |
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He was selected as soloist in the boys' choir of the Chapel Royal. |
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The score is a mosaic of firefly elusiveness and languorous cantilena, a patchwork which relies so much upon alert interaction between the soloist and the large orchestra. |
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And John Garner was the accomplished soloist in Lev Smirnov's Partita no. |
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The concerto as a vehicle for solo performance accompanied by an orchestra became widespread, although the relationship between soloist and orchestra was relatively simple. |
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The soloist of the psychologising and parodie monodrama was the awe-inspiring soprano Marianne Pousseur, a specialist in this type of music and well acquainted with the role. |
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The Philharmonic's usual concertmistress, Joanna Kurkowicz, was the violin soloist and, in fact, Korde, who is a professor of music at Holy Cross, wrote the piece for her. |
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Faculty harpist Laura Zaerr will be a featured soloist with the University Symphony in a performance of Germaine Tailleferre's Concertino for Harp and Orchestra. |
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Her discography numbers about 30 recordings as a soloist or a recitalist. |
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She has appeared extensively as a jazz stylist, classical recitalist and sacred repertoire soloist and has presented programs in New England, Philadelphia and New York City. |
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