Finally, fit a small trumpet type jam cleat to the same side of the tiller as the fairlead, as far forrard as will not interfere with your grip. |
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This view of the head of the trumpeter shows its distinct mouth, reminiscent of the puckered lips of a trumpet player. |
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The trumpet vine rewards us with magnificent orange-red flowers, seems almost impervious to storms and can be planted directly into the sand. |
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The speaking trumpet dates back to the days of the hand drawn and hand operated fire engines. |
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How can you trumpet a strong military and a vigorous foreign policy and then insist on small government? |
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She occasionally breaks out a trumpet for some sporadic, appropriate bursts. |
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The shell trumpet and the nose flute are the most common instruments in the region. |
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The first plants to appear with the melting snows include drifts of spring and trumpet gentians, Narcissus asturiensis and spring squill. |
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Many baritone players are guys who couldn't really hack it as trumpet players. |
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Performing the poignant trumpet call is the 92-year-old's way of honouring those who made the ultimate sacrifice for Queen and country. |
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Despite the occasional obligatory trumpet with a mind of its own, Lucas kept the tempos lively. |
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Imagine you are practicing a piece for a forthcoming concert, for a church offertory, or to accompany a trumpet player down the street. |
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Often, stentors will attach the lower portion of their pod to debris and assume the trumpet shape illustrated above. |
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Avoid skirts with flared trumpet styling or ruffles at the lower edge that only accentuate body width. |
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The party followed six pall-bearers into church who carried Mr Jackson's coffin, which was adorned with a large spray of white trumpet lilies. |
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Wisteria and clematis vines cover the arbors, while Boston ivy and trumpet vines link the two levels. |
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Both groups toss aside any fact that gets in their way and trumpet any cockamamie cure-all that supports their goals. |
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In the spirit of Shostakovich's last symphony, Vainberg quotes trumpet fanfares from well-known works by Rimsky-Korsakov, Bizet, and Mendelssohn. |
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It opens with the flute and snare drums joined then by the trumpet in a festive mood. |
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She raised an arm over her head, signaling the advance, and the trumpet blew in concurrence. |
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The surgeon depresses the trumpet valve to instill and remove the fluid and air from the balloon. |
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The multi-talented performer plays an array of instruments including piano, guitar, bass, trumpet and saxophone. |
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He was in a body plaster for four months, and it was a while before he returned to trumpet playing. |
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Our media will then proceed to trumpet this beyond all reason as cause for alarm and consternation. |
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He has played trumpet for the Cal Marching Band and enjoys running and playing intramural sports. |
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Extended instrumental introductions and occasional solos for guitar, horn and trumpet add tasteful variety to the program. |
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There are plenty of male flautists and female trumpet players, and members teach each other, encouraging inclusion and participation. |
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I love the Candoli trumpet flourish used for a stop before Wynton's solo turn midway through the song. |
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The thin-crusted pizzas are tops, with seasonal embellishments like trumpet royale mushrooms, fontina cheese, and thyme. |
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Some politicians trumpet these results very loudly as some sort of achievement. |
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Once Slatkin stepped a bit on the pedal, it worked out very nicely and the trumpet call from the wings was at least a cute idea. |
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It likes to trumpet its all out speed while ignoring the 130 watts of power and size of the beast. |
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Insects fascinated White, he even went as far as trying to see if bees could hear by shouting down a large ear trumpet next to the hives. |
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An ear trumpet could make him a good stocking-filler, to help him with the tricky art of listening. |
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So we just put him over there with a large ear trumpet so he can still take part. |
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Greater bindweed also climbs though the hedge. Its big white trumpet flowers open during the day then twist closed as night falls. |
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Becalmed sounds of electric piano, bass, acoustic guitars, and soft trumpet tones appear at a tempo that's so relaxed it's almost asleep. |
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Clematis and trumpet vines drape the walls in a lush curtain, and elephant's ears, hostas, and hardy bananas lend swaths of varied greens. |
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His bright, sparkling trumpet and the joyful growl of his voice are familiar to people the world over. |
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A six-time Grammy nominee, Elling has released six albums of audacious vocalese that trumpet his daring range and intellectualism. |
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One way to blow your own trumpet is to prepare a publicity folder with a pretty bow for eye appeal and palatable contents for reader appeal. |
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The second system has the considerable merit of enabling you to blow your own trumpet in the way best calculated to satisfy your own vanity. |
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At the Yucca Mountain Information Centre, videos and wallcharts trumpet the efforts to ensure that the site is safe. |
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Byron Wallen switches between trumpet and flugelhorn, whilst Ed Jones likewise moves from soprano to tenor horns. |
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I'm always a sucker for a good horn section, so the trombone, trumpet and sax were a welcome sight and sound. |
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Haydn composed this piece to show the chromatic possibility of the then-new keyed trumpet. |
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The Bohemian works were written for the keyed trumpet's predecessor, the valve trumpet. |
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The government is keen to trumpet its array of complex housing schemes to help key workers. |
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A trumpet appears at the end of the song, plucks a note from the air and holds it until I think something will burst. |
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Although I'm not a huge jazz fan, I loved the fact that you're never out of earshot of someone playing a trumpet or some other wind instrument. |
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The phrases noted above are like blasts from an air horn or plastic trumpet, blaring technical correctness. |
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I did also play in a woodwind orchestra, but the trumpet is very traditional and plays a big role in mining bands. |
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Al is a rare multi-instrumentalist, able to alternate on reeds and trumpet with equal artistry over an evening. |
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In this theater almsgiving is rewarded by trumpet fanfare, prayer is a public parade, and the discomfort of fasting is a spectacle. |
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They, in turn, supported a vetro a reticello basin in which blown-glass winged dragons clustered around a tall glass trumpet lily spouting water. |
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He was primarily self-taught beginning on trumpet before switching to alto sax. |
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Over the years, he has become adept on alto and soprano saxes, value trombone, flugelhorn, pocket trumpet, cornet, and various clarinets. |
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His exquisite phrasing is heard frequently on 16-or 32-bar alto sax solos, and occasionally on trumpet and clarinet. |
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Anyone who likes Latino music should hear this album for its conga, maraca and trumpet songs alone. |
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He was born in Dublin where his father was a popular band leader and trumpet player. |
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Every place near is filled with the sound of a loud trumpet, so the report of your manfulness is loud. |
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They showcase the sweetly fragrant yellow flowers of angel's trumpet surrounded by a colorful tapestry of shorter flowers and foliage plants. |
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Geraldine Nelson had trouble keeping her potted angel's trumpet from blowing over in the New Jersey winds. |
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In addition, would you recommend an angel's trumpet for this area, and if so, what would be the feeding schedule? |
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Other works include The Nativity for soprano and orchestra, sacred choral anthems, hymn preludes for organ and works for trumpet and organ. |
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Gina woke up to the notes of a trumpet sounding reveille breaking the dewy morning silence. |
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Nils Petter Molvaer, an electric jazz player is a virtuoso trumpet player who endows his music with exotic elements and broken rhythms. |
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On the glass panel of the telephone box a lithe figure of ambiguous gender was blowing a trumpet fanfare to celebrate his arrival. |
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This astonishing London-based band have fiddles, accordion, trumpet, flute, tambura, guitar and oodles of musical ability and rhythmic energy. |
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Do you want to become a trumpet major at a Canadian university or school of music? |
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But jazz quartets can be varied with a trumpet or a saxophone or even a flute or clarinet. |
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Years of bitter experience have taught me that if you don't blow your own trumpet, it's fairly rare that anyone else will do it on your behalf. |
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Discovered in Missouri, Shooby's musical style is imitating a trumpet in a bizarre improvised scat over a variety of music. |
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At any moment he's liable to surprise you with a riff on his trumpet or break out into spontaneous scatting, tapping his foot to a mental rhythm. |
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On the island of New Guinea lives a glossy, bluish black bird called the trumpet manucode. |
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Everything is haunting, from Desmond Shea's baleful trumpet to Chris Mulhauser's baritone guitar, and low frequencies are well catered for. |
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Her warm bass trumpet solo adds to a very memorable performance that will remain a definitive rendition of the great song. |
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In jazz, the goal is not to make a trumpet mimic a sax or a drum set sound like an acoustic bass. |
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Finally, you hear a trumpet call, followed by the big sound of the bass drum. |
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As for subway performers who actually do exist, I really dig that dude with the trumpet and beatbox, but I haven't seen him in a while. |
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He is a man who seems determined to make a trumpet sound like a tin whistle. |
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Among popular hummingbird plants are single varieties of trumpet creeper, impatiens, bee balm, and salvia. |
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The EU's brave mission to improve its transparency continues to be seen as nothing more than another tootle of this tired old trumpet. |
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The bell of the trumpet is decorated with a garland bearing the maker's name and the place where the instrument was made. |
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He made me an unbelievable trumpet with carvings and designs and a big double bell, like a space-age trumpet. |
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His trumpet solos were as torridly intense as his vigorous tones that steered the surging ensembles. |
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The vocalised trumpet often resembled a shakuhachi or the gentle soughing of wind through trees. |
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As a trumpeter, I have played a number of trumpet tunes and voluntaries that were transcriptions of original baroque organ works. |
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Voters can't be bothered to look closely enough to find misdoings, while politicians trumpet their every success. |
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While they were eating, a small jazz band in the corner, made up of only a trumpet, trombone, clarinet, tuba, flute, and drums, provided music. |
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They are also accomplished musicians too, playing saxophone, trumpet, trombone, harmonica and acoustic guitar. |
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My mother played some piano and my father was able to play violin, some piano, saxophone, clarinet, trumpet and trombone. |
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Soon afterwards, he joined the local brass band, learning first the trombone, then the trumpet and cornet. |
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Children also get to learn the saxophone, clarinet, trumpet, trombone, guitar, violin, and drums, among other things. |
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They were enrolled in beginning school ensemble programs, with most of them learning the clarinet, trumpet, flute or saxophone. |
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This blended apparently effortlessly with vocals, a trumpet, flute, saxophone, guitars and drums. |
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Dad played the saxophone, clarinet, trumpet or cornet, and the French horn. |
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Most of them were holding an instrument of some sort, whether it was a trumpet or trombone, snare drum or flute. |
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I play a number of different instruments including guitar, trumpet, flute and saxophone, but my main interest is composing. |
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As we headed back, we suddenly heard the trumpet of an elephant that was extremely close. |
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There was no sound except the crackle of the fire, a hyena cry and the occasional trumpet of an elephant. |
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It is a noise half-way between a lion's roar and the trumpet of an irritated elephant. |
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The loud trumpet sounds from the Elephant large as he knocks down a tree in a single charge. |
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The Angel's trumpet flower produces a narcotic scent used by South American shamans to induce visionary dreams. |
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So far, I have never seen any hummingbirds there, although I am told that they find trumpet flowers irresistible. |
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For a full century, King Alfred has set the standard for yellow trumpet daffodils. |
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It's a member of the daffodil family, but looks much more delicate than the big yellow trumpet daffodils you see in people's yards in the spring. |
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It produces large trumpet, ivory white flowers which open a lovely pale primrose yellow, fading gradually to pure white. |
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Five times a jackal barks in the cold season, and the elephants trumpet and donkeys bay many times more. |
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He would have been excused had he chosen to blow his trumpet a little, but that is not his style. |
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But in the lead-up to the election she was happy to blow her trumpet over the achievements of her first term. |
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He seems to already be blowing his trumpet like he did the first time round. |
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However, the company's new media division is clearly one area where Lawrence could quite easily blow his trumpet. |
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This trumpet vine is very similar to C. radicans but blooms in late summer and fall. |
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A creeper that is flowering at the present and is very worthwhile growing is the orange trumpet creeper. |
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The album is studded throughout with glorious blasts of trumpet adding to the CD's general utter charm. |
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A trumpet blast echoed through his ears for a second time, announcing the start of the trek home. |
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Another Australian twiner, this one has very lovely large pink trumpet flowers with a darker centre. |
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He's got his trumpet with him and he's doing his thing, blowing smooth leads with an easy sense of cool that seems to come naturally. |
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So much did he love playing the trumpet that he had bought a new instrument. |
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Gabrielli also added to the important repertory of Bolognese trumpet pieces. |
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The former is a jazz march parody that layers high-pitched whistling flute over a muted trumpet and slow, rolling drum hits. |
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You will hear the leader's muted trumpet with reed backing on the first chorus. |
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What comes, instead of the dials being turned up a notch or two, is that a muted trumpet joins in. |
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He is an internationally renowned bandleader and one of the greatest trumpet and brass instrument players. |
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The chalkos has frequently been interpreted as a brass instrument similar to the trumpet or horn. |
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Like Arve Henriksen, Tamura's vocalised trumpet often resembled a shakuhachi or the gentle soughing of wind through trees. |
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Instead, they gradually fell into a sullen silence, their noisemakers clacked to a dead stop, and the truculent trumpet blasts were shushed. |
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The apparatus employed consisted of a musket, to the muzzle of which a speaking trumpet had been attached. |
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Pictures of the speaking trumpet can be seen in many paintings of the period. |
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It would be misleading to call this local sextet an orchestral pop band, despite their occasionally clean melodies and prominent trumpet and cello. |
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He was a multi-instrumentalist skilled on the saxophone, the flute, the trumpet and other instruments he invented because he felt he needed a new sound. |
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He still has nine more months in office and will use them to trumpet his antiwar positions and his passion for the working man. |
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The trumpet manucode belongs to a diverse group of about sixty species of birds, including trumpeter swans and whooping cranes, that have dramatically elongated windpipes. |
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Supposedly materialized or teleported gifts from the spirits, apports appear at some seances under varying conditions-sometimes tumbling out of a spirit trumpet, for example. |
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The band's keyboard player doubles on trumpet to shake things up a bit. |
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The beating of drums coupled with notes from the trumpet rent the air. |
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It's perhaps not widely known because we don't always blow our trumpet. |
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The Western trumpet is built in the traditional shape of one long loop. |
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Gravesham Borough Band is busy with its season of summer bandstand engagements but desperately needs a dedicated permanent conductor and cornet, trumpet and clarinet players. |
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There are enough distractions already, from the trumpet sounding the start of a new race to other customers knocking on the wooden window sill for luck. |
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The mellophone is the marching French horn and looks like a fat trumpet. |
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Holding the chain railing, we followed our leader and had up-close encounters with yellow tails, sergeant majors, blue tang, trumpet fish, and other reef dwellers. |
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Sympathetic strings are a characteristic feature of such instruments as the Hardanger fiddle, srag, sarod, sitar, viola d' amore, and sometimes the trumpet marine. |
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To force myself to continue, I needed inspiration and turned to trad jazz, then having a popular upsurge, where the trumpet was a lead instrument. |
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A total of 14 acts were laid on for a 170-strong audience, with majorettes, solo singers, trumpet players and dancers strutting their stuff on stage. |
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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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He is an avid composer, trumpet player and leader of small groups. |
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There are toddlers, feeble octogenarians walking while reading a prayer book, and even a pilgrim with a brass trumpet who is eager to serenade the company. |
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The spectacular failure to transform massive spending into votes has led many analysts to trumpet a victory of organization and GOTV over media bucks. |
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They'll trumpet their exemplar's views when he says too much gothic severity hardens the heart, but probably don't care to publicise such statements as this. |
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He revealed a rougher side, first singing garbled scat vocals into his trumpet, and then using actual words, which was unexpected from an abstract act. |
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One day, the toot of a trumpet could bring it tumbling down. |
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Some sound concrete clarion calls, some are like string quartets, some trumpet brazen marches, and some squeal in sheer discord. |
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Arnold has no time for the western powers which trumpet about democracy because white farmers are dispossessed of the land that their forefathers stole from Africans. |
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Our four talented actor-musicians show their versatility by playing a dozen instruments including cello, violin, euphonium, guitar, trumpet and accordion. |
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The music becomes a dense, intricate concoction enriched by electronic elements, melodica, glockenspiel, accordion, trumpet, viola, pump organ, and banjo. |
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Today, the upbeats will become more downbeat as the trumpet tootles peter out and the sax puts a lid on the headlong rush of demisemiquavers for another year. |
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Clinging vines, which include trumpet vine, climbing hydrangea and English ivy, adhere to a surface with tiny aerial rootlets that grow from the stems. |
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Researchers in Germany have been looking carefully at the after glow of the big bang and have decided that the universe is shaped like a trumpet bell. |
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Sophisticated bossa nova grooves, seductive vocals and nuanced acoustic guitars are given texture by jazzy electric piano and flute and trumpet cameos. |
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The trumpet shaped flowers are widely accepted as being a symbol of the Orange Order, and members wear the lily with pride on their sashes during marches. |
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If it has a mouthpiece or a reed, Al can produce sublime music on it, often switching effortlessly between trumpet, saxophone and clarinet on the same gig. |
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I am drunk on laughter and the honeyed sound of a trumpet in a smoky pub. |
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Justices Scalia and Thomas trumpet the value of constitutional originalism, but only when it suits their preferred outcome. |
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A 4th grade Jessie James with a backpack and juice box, who practices trumpet and plays soccer. |
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On warm summer evenings, a heady fragrance from angel's trumpet and heliotrope permeates the air, reminding the family of their former home in the islands. |
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I was a trumpet in Army, and the basso profundo in the other two. |
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Most tracks are simply heavy rhythmic grooves, adorned with ethnic percussion and wah-wah, with Davis spurting spacey, celestial trumpet shapes over the top. |
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A trumpet sounded through the sun-bathed cloisters of Manchester Cathedral after the coffin of Stephen Oake was borne in by six pall-bearers yesterday. |
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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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Of the various types of ceremonial trumpet signal, for example, sennet and tucket emerge with precise meanings, but flourish seems at times a more generalized term. |
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The mahout bowed to the Goddess, hands arched in the gesture of namaskar, then began circling the shrine followed by the cymbal-clashers and the trumpet blowers. |
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This military role was later assumed by the bugle or trumpet in the west. |
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In that way it's like playing a natural trumpet without valves. |
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Brass instruments included the cornett, natural horn, Baroque trumpet, serpent and the trombone. |
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George Buchanan claimed that they had replaced the trumpet on the battlefield. |
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During his national service with the British Army in Cyprus, Barry began performing as a musician after learning to play the trumpet. |
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Serving in the British Army, Barry spent his national service playing the trumpet. |
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Alfred Hitchcock makes his customary cameo appearance walking in the street in a gray suit and carrying a trumpet case. |
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In the summer of 1558, Knox published his best known pamphlet, The first blast of the trumpet against the monstruous regiment of women. |
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He has been noodling with that trumpet all afternoon, and every bit of it sounds awful. |
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The trumpet shaped terminations of various types of Bronze Age Irish jewellery are also reminiscent of motifs popular in later Celtic decoration. |
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Each time the trumpet gives a blast, they fire one time, spread out in battle array according to the drilling patterns. |
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Martineau began losing her senses of taste and smell at a young age, becoming increasingly deaf and having to use an ear trumpet. |
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It is also lavishly equipped with Marchal headlamps and center light, a windscreen sun visor and matching pairs of Lucas trumpet and Alto horns. |
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They did nothing but publish and trumpet all the reproaches they could devise against the Irish. |
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Consumer watchpuppies by the basketful start yapping, led by legislators seeing a no-lose position to trumpet at election time. |
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I was in high school jazz band, but I started off playing trumpet and baritone horn. |
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The synth sounds are very 70s, and Randy Brecker plays his trumpet through a wah-wah pedal in tremendous Miles fashion. |
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Doris Duke left the high stone walls, now covered in trumpet creeper vines, and set marble sculptures of human figures inside them. |
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Ivies, honeysuckle, trumpet creeper, silverlace vine and wisteria usually are able to fend for themselves. |
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Campsis, or the trumpet vine, likes to be planted against a hot, sunny brick wall to flower well. |
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Daturas, angel's trumpet and fuchsias are particularly greedy and should be fed twice weekly. |
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Also in full bloom were angel trumpets, camellias, hibiscus, orange trumpet vine and busy lizzies taller than me. |
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If they don't perform as you wish, perhaps you could consider replacing them with fast growing trumpet vine or Rangoon creeper. |
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Varieties commonly found in these forests include grapevines, trumpet vine, poison ivy, and Virginia creeper. |
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Some of their favorites include red salvia, coral bells, trumpet vine, honeysuckle, gladiolus, jasmine, begonias, and scarlet morning glory. |
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Today it has many additional names including stink weed, angel's trumpet, loco weed, devil's trumpet, and thorn apple. |
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For the sun, sky blue cape plumbago and orange or yellow trumpet vines are also marginal but worth the risk. |
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Along with cedars, arborvitae and honeysuckle trumpet vines, Keating's yard is home to 13 birds of prey. |
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It is the naturally occurring offspring of the purple pitcher plant and the yellow trumpet, known botanically as Sarracenia x catesbaei. |
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The arbor, fashioned from rebar, is covered in trumpet vines, though it formerly held a climbing rose. |
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Biggs watched her ninth-grade son, who plays with the same trumpet that his father used for his high school marching band. |
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First she tried trellis panels trained with Carolina jessamine and trumpet vines. |
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Greenstring's Sunchoke Soup is laden with rich, earthy Sonoma Coast black trumpet mushrooms. |
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Ukelele, string bass, trombone, trumpet, clarinet and a smattering of percussion enrich these gentle, cheerful songs. |
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Specklebellies laughed and cackled, while Canada geese tried to keep up with the trumpet of tundra swans in a chorus of waterfowl music. |
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Twinberry honeysuckle has pairs of tiny red-orange trumpet flowers tipped in yellow during spring and summer that are followed by black berries. |
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Or plant such colorful, tropical-looking choices as black-eyed Susan vine, bougainvillea, passion vine, and trumpet vine. |
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If you have a tiny yard behind a rowhouse, use trellises to support vines, such as coral honeysuckle or trumpet creeper, that have habitat value. |
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David showed it to experts at Kew Gardens, where they have a specimen of the plant, which is also known as thorn apple and Devil's trumpet. |
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Glory, that blatant word, which haunts some military minds like the bray of the trumpet. |
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Collins shifts the slide, and the trumpet phrase gets faster and faster until it blurs into a buzzy pitch. |
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Ralske, who studied jazz trumpet at the Berklee College of Music in Boston, moved to London around the time the whole C86 scene was thriving. |
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The shiny brass trumpet that Pop bought was his golden ticket out of Poorville and onto the streets of the three F's Fame, Fortune and Freedom. |
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Oran, the trumpet player who was known as Hot Lips played with Bennie Moten band and also had several of his own. |
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There were no other exits from this trumpet junction though room was left for an extension to the south. |
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The instrument used to mark the passage of a watch was the buccina, from which the trumpet derives. |
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Work proceeded to the strains of a fiddle, to the piping of the boatswain and his mates, or in earlier times yet, to the trumpet. |
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Flower gardeners around here may want to consider trumpet honeysuckle, New England aster, white snakeroot and some varieties of goldenrod, she advised. |
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They produced a number of large banners for businesses in Charleston that wished to trumpet their solidarity with fellow South Carolinians who, of course, were also customers. |
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The presidential guard in 19th-century uniforms goose-stepped, military bands belted out trumpet fanfares, and cannons outside fired a 30-gun salute. |
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The keys of the piano roll like an ocean swell, violin, trumpet and trip wire guitar fight for air against double bubble drumming tempest and fury. |
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There is a fine trumpet solo as well, sometimes played on the Posthorn. |
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In the jungles of French Guiana, Azteca andreae lives symbiotically with the trumpet tree, called Cecropia obtusa, which hosts colonies of the insects in its hollow stems. |
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Powdery mildew is a minor problem on lilacs and certain types of azaleas, as well as many other plants like beech, birch, dogwood, trumpet vine, privet and viburnum. |
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Our spacious room and balcony overlooked immaculate gardens, with pristine green lawns, butterfly-attracting shrubs, flame trees, yellow trumpet bush, palm trees and the sea. |
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Nelson on his sax and trumpet player Don Comins blow it sweet. |
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Means, took place on the back terrace beneath an iron arch draped with smilax set against a wall covered with evergreen wisteria and trumpet vines. |
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Try bougainvillea, most common trumpet vines, passion vine, and wisteria. |
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I fiddle and scrape and poke for a while, banging out the dottle from my previous pipeful into an ashtray and puffing down the stem like a horn player warming up his trumpet. |
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As the drums fade to a whisper, the flutes are replaced by a very deep, clean-toned trumpet that explores the opening theme above occasional gongings. |
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The herald blew his trumpet and shouted that the King was dead. |
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While in Rome he suffered a severe cold, which left him partially deaf, and, as a result, he began to carry a small ear trumpet with which he is often pictured. |
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The extended, characteristic trumpet tune that precedes and accompanies the voice is the only significant instrumental solo in the entire oratorio. |
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The principal trombone is considered the leader of the low brass section, while the principal trumpet is generally considered the leader of the entire brass section. |
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The royal herald sounded a trumpet to announce their arrival. |
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The large bull gave a basso trumpet as he charged the hunters. |
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The circus trainer cracked the whip, signaling the elephant to trumpet. |
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