The band will probably branch out into new musical areas, like melody and proper chord progression. |
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The award-winning film composer has struck a chord in the worlds of film, theatre, classical and pop. |
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Irish musicians are hoping their plea to stop US military aircraft refuelling at Shannon will strike the right chord with the Government. |
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I realised that despite my best moral efforts I had not been able to sound the right chord. |
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Kathy smiled and left Leah alone because she saw she had touched a chord with this conversation. |
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And indeed, just before the end, there is a strategic, if quiet, B minor chord filling an entire lento bar. |
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In example 50 the numerals representing the scale-degrees are misplaced, and example 20 ends just before the crucial chord mentioned in the text. |
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For all their weakness, cowardice, and self-delusion, these men strike an unexpected, sympathetic chord. |
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You'll have to untangle a lot of overly complicated chord changes and annoyingly high-pitched vocal turns to find anything else worth savoring. |
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Dissonant notes resolve in a conventional way, only to become part of an unexpected chord. |
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Her words strike a chord deep within me and a sudden chill shoots down my spine. |
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In measures 68 and 69, an A-major chord, the dominant of the key, is sounded, signaling the end of the piece. |
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The chord of the segment is given, as is its area, and the student is asked to compute its height. |
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Their music uses splashes of standard rock chord changes, angular math rock melodic counterpoints, and punk's thrashy nihilism. |
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Play it forte and legato while playing the rest of the chord piano and staccato. |
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On a more domestic note, the old refrain, marry in haste, repent at leisure strikes a chord. |
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My lengthy epistle on Sunday seems to have touched a chord with a lot of people. |
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A scattering of greying heads among the youngsters in the crowd show it's striking a chord with those who were there the first time around. |
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Now, however, the vast lobby is eerily silent save a single discordant chord struck repeatedly by a piano tuner. |
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He was found to have severe mitral regurgitation associated with a ruptured mitral chord and infective endocarditis. |
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The autoharp strums a single chord every 2 bars in the verse, but in the chorus changes chords. |
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Their only curveballs thrown here are Beach Boys harmonies and the same augmented chord progression, and even these twists are rationed. |
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Renault's own bold designs and investment in safety technology have clearly struck a chord with customers. |
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The pianist augments many of these mid tempo pieces with lilting harmonics, a deft right hand, and well-placed chord clusters. |
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That's why they tried to shut down several other sites providing lyrics, tablature and chord charts. |
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The title track is a vastly underrated song with some catchy chord changes and choruses to keep the listener interested. |
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The chord changes aren't rocket science, but the rhythms are fast and the fills are rare, quick and poisonous. |
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Scott and Dankworth were blown away by the melodic lines of modern jazz and its soulful use of chord substitutions, ninths and flattened fifths. |
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Given a circle, the apothem is the perpendicular distance from the midpoint of a chord to the circle's center. |
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Syncopated staccato accents gradually drop into place on top of an extended droning chord. |
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But there has to be something about the character that strikes a chord in you emotionally. |
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Her enthusiasm apparently strikes a chord as more and more women become involved in a formerly forbidden athletic arena. |
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Spear claims he is only making music about what he knows and if that touches a chord in his listeners, so be it. |
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I feel women directors bring a refreshingly emotional approach to films, which strikes a chord with the masses. |
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Dissonance emerges through highly structured chord strata and haunting tonalities and atonalities working with and then against one another. |
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In the opera's famous opening scene, deep in the waters of the Rhine river, Wagner unfolds an immense, rolling E-flat major chord. |
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The fact that well over a thousand people signed your petition shows it struck a chord with your readers. |
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For kids who grew up in the '90s, metal music means whiny frat boys half-rapping over oafish power chord dross. |
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If Glasgow's research shows that a right-on, edgy image strikes a chord not only with visitors but also its citizens, then it could work. |
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They ended their set by standing on their amps and jumped off them while playing one loud raucous power chord. |
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By remembering a simple pattern one can determine the amount of sharps and flats in a major chord. |
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A ray of hope appears in the form of Mary Burke, the daughter of a heart attack victim who strikes a chord with the troubled Pierce. |
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It reminded me of what a ray gun would look like except this had a chord and several switches. |
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Again, his was an incomplete realisation, using just one pair of symbol and chord pages to create a version that lasted about four minutes. |
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The DA20's waspish empennage and T-tail were still there, as was the short chord, long-span, high-aspect ratio wing with upturned winglets. |
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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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The taste of it on my tongue strikes a chord deep within me, the way that the smell of woodsmoke or Grandma's perfume does for some. |
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He settled his shaky fingers on the guitar strings, strummed a chord, fell silent, sighed, then rallied. |
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George took his acoustic guitar and began showing me the chord changes, which I nervously wrote out on a chord chart. |
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The picture you took of the boy lying in the alley also seemed to strike a chord. |
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And the chord structure, for those of you who play an instrument, is unexpected and worth checking out. |
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The guitar is tuned to E, and an Eminor chord on a guitar just rings and rings forever. |
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It does strike a chord when you see just how victimizing some of the media reports can be of Africa. |
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But it is based on the chord structure of what I played before it, except that it was based on a diminished scale. |
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At first the student hesitated with the chord changes and fumbled quite often, messing up accidentals in the tune as we jumped from key to key and so on. |
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The reason animators use familiar voices is that immediate connection the audience makes with a character whose speech strikes a recollective chord. |
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In the same way that a scale here and a chord there do not a symphony make, there is more to a word processor than a spell checker and a couple of font definitions. |
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The wildly anarchic chaos created by the Marx Brothers at their best was a breath of fresh air, and their contempt for authority figures struck a chord with Milligan. |
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Finger positions can be marked for the suggested fingering of the chord. |
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He's just about incompetent whenever he tries anything but the root of the chord, so it's not like we're getting much help from that side, either. |
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He deletes that infamous unresolved opening chord and inserts some suitably ominous guitar atmospherics that play up the desperation obscured by the Beatles' peppy original. |
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Based off of the same chord structures, and the songs are of heartache and loss. |
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His films, sprightly action flicks with clear lines between good and evil and a noble hero, touched a chord in a post-war America. |
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That rationale might not strike a chord with every football fan but then enlightened self-interest goes with the territory of football club ownership. |
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Here are the guitar chord charts for the basic guitar bar chords. |
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Marr offers nothing in the way of inventive guitar on Boomslang, a disc of barre chord throwaways you'd only expect from demos leaked by an unscrupulous associate. |
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You can't create a chord for it with three pitches each a half-step apart. |
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It touches a chord somewhere and people think it's great fun. |
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His writing was funny and touched a chord with millions of people. |
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I think it strikes a chord because it reflects the authors' enthusiasm and passion for their pursuits, however various, and their love of exploration and learning. |
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So the music that accompanies Isolde's death is her transfiguration, and the repetition of the Tristan chord shows that she dies of love's sorrow. |
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He jumped on the energy drinks bandwagon three years ago with Go-Go, using a miniskirted, Japanime-inspired icon intended to strike a chord with Internet-savvy clubgoers. |
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The tritone chord which has pervaded the entire work, at last resolves into quiet consonance, and the masterpiece is over. |
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It's not been to everyone's taste, and Anthony Beyga's portrait of a pumpkin with tummyache will strike a chord with many people. |
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Nestled into the side of a hill, the berm house, as it's known, struck a chord with them. |
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Many of his lyrics are heartsongs that will chord with human life as long as it has sorrows and aspirations. |
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Her comments struck a chord with discerning critics and writers. |
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The chords and scales can also be presented in musical notation as well as chord charts and tablatures. |
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Her giggly, schoolgirlish prattle and singing of the famous Byker Grove theme tune struck the right chord with the theatre full of Geordies. |
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If possible, having the student gently roll or arpeggiate the large chord can provide an adequate solution to extreme skips in many cases. |
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The music was built around incremental chord changes that recalled a quartertone maqam melody. |
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The first line striking an emotional chord is reciprocated with cheers, claps and zindabad chants only getting louder. |
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Sir, How FC Chapman's letter on 'neighbourhoods wimping out' struck a chord. |
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Lundberg's comments struck a chord with Bee Young, who opened the Wickit Weedery dispensary on Main Street. |
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The Greek's basic trigonometric function was the ratio of a circle's chord subtending twice a given angle to the circle's radius. |
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Replete with varied repetitions of broken chord patterns, it features moving eighth notes alternating between the hands. |
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He recommends blocking broken chord patterns to determine the best fingering. |
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To invoke chord commands, users must press a spacebar and braille keys simultaneously. |
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There were no longer any chord changes, and it was no longer a ballad. |
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The repetition of one chord progression may mark off the only section in a simple verse form such as the twelve bar blues. |
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The buckling case is one chord buckling about the minor axis of the column. |
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Dr Imtiaz Hashmi works as a Neuro spinal chord surlocaln at a private hospital. |
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In August 2006 she began to regain use of her legs as the scar tissue around her spinal chord slowly began to dissipate. |
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The Ipswich chord was opened at the end of March 2014 allowing trains to run without reversing from Felixstowe towards the Midlands. |
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In guitar tablature the chord is illustrated using four dots to show where the musician's fingers should be placed. |
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The Edge's distinctive mandolinlike upper-position chord fills took on a more sparkling quality, and Bono added some depth to his singing. |
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There was a slight tremor in his voice, that thrilled, answeringly, a chord in the heart of his questioner. |
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It's easy to play, and with its toylike appearance, there's an element of irony before you even strum your first chord. |
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She bought a Travis chord book, and started playing on her father's guitar, teaching herself how to play at only 12 years old. |
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One key feature for which Demian sought the patent was the sounding of an entire chord by depressing one key. |
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Another Sullivan trademark criticised by Hughes is the repeated use of the chord of the augmented fourth at moments of pathos. |
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The graph G is triangulated if every cycle of length at least 4 has a chord. |
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This sparkling wine struck a chord with Americans and Europeans alike. |
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As he strides closer and closer, each footfall is reinforced by a background chord. |
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It encompasses the same chord structure as the Clementi, but instead of broken chords, Camidge uses solid chords, giving this a more solid, dignified sound. |
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The Canterbury scene, originating in the late 1960s, denoted a subset of prog bands who emphasised the use of wind instruments, complex chord changes and long improvisations. |
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As in Sequenza IV, the suspension of the chord creates several different layers of activity, which can be understood by looking at the right hand's chord in bar two. |
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Protests began May 15 and spread to cities across the country, striking a chord with hundreds of thousands fed-up with the wage cuts and tax hikes. |
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Although there may be some flexion at the tarsometatarsal joint, this chord was very close on average to the sum of Levi's averages for the tarsal and metatarsal lengths. |
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De Courtonne's claims struck a chord at a time when French patriotism was offended at the success of the Dutch and the English in making new discoveries in the South Pacific. |
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He rejected the standard barre chord fretting technique used by most guitarists in favor of fretting the low 6th string root notes with his thumb. |
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The keyboard player would improvise a chord voicing for each bass note. |
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For example, a music scenario could consist of a note not belonging to a chord, that is, nonpolyphonic, and with a height set within a certain range. |
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The need to resist compression of the lower chord is seen in the use of wooden poles while the tension of the upper chord is shown by the outstretched arms. |
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The benefits of this breakthrough research are profoundly important to those who suffer spinal chord injuries across Australia and the world, Mr Sachse said. |
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Big-city symphony orchestras are striking a fresh chord by reaching out to the often largely minority communities that surround them and recruiting the talent of the children. |
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The distinctive feature of these tunings is that one or more open strings played along with fingered chord shapings provide a drone note part of the chord. |
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However, they lost out to The Ramones, who were on the rise in New York in the same mid-70s period with their three chord rock'n'roll, and Talking Heads. |
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One of the signatures of the genre is the guitar power chord. |
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When Longridge Towers School, near Berwick, found out that Baobab College in Zambia could hardly afford to pay for sheet music, it struck a chord with staff and pupils. |
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