Careful listening enhances children's learning of a song, rhythm or complete musical piece. |
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The sound is held together by the rhythm section of sousaphonist Mike and drummer Mark. |
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After a short, nearly atonal string interlude, the rhythm section breaks in with an Arabic-sounding, odd-metered vamp. |
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His talent is amazing, his superb phrasing and sense of rhythm as flawless as a perfectly cut diamond. |
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His bizarre word rhythm and gleeful disregard for punctuation makes even his most banal utterances sound dramatic. |
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Her sense of rhythm is perfect, which shows in both her singing and her dancing. |
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Adverse drug effects, which were more common in the rhythm control group, included bradycardia and lung problems. |
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While a natural sense of rhythm helps, most folks can learn the steps and become familiar through practice, he says. |
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They're all played with a fantastically organic sense of rhythm and the 1st violins shine throughout. |
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The band's natural rhythm and fast tempo is likely also at the heart of its loyal following. |
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Their untransferable density speaks of our concerns, of memory, of that which grows as the incessant rhythm of experience fades. |
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Good-natured and bouncy, they show off Reed's love of old-school rock 'n' roll and Sterling Morrison's effortless rhythm work. |
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He wanted the words to sound beautiful, and sometimes meaning is actually less important than the sound and rhythm of the words. |
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Part of the beauty of Cold Roses lies in the effortless free-flowing rhythm of the words coupled with bittersweet lyrics. |
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Rather unmelodic blocks of sound bump against one another, brutalizing the rhythm as it pushes through the song. |
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Lost in the rhythm of the verse, you are hardly conscious that it was first expressed in Spanish. |
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It is through an unexpected blending of rhythm and syntax that his prose yields the remarkable or compelling image. |
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His attempt to define effective prose rhythm technically is one of the most curious and interesting parts of his preface. |
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And the poetic rhythm and verse of the script gently takes the audience along for the ride. |
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The verse rhythm should have its effect upon the hearers without their being conscious of it. |
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The notion that cities are removed from the natural rhythm of the seasons is pervasive. |
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Nothing beats the natural rhythm of tropical island life and kayaking is the way to experience it, writes Catherine Lawson. |
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Sometimes they explicitly enforce it, sometimes it just sorts itself out in the natural rhythm of being two people with two lives. |
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She unlimbered her ChecKard and used it to tap a rhythm on the ancient hardwood surface. |
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Hypocotyl extension in rapid shade avoidance therefore coincides with the seedling's natural endogenous rhythm of elongation growth. |
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He indulges in doo-wop, rhythm and blues, boogie-woogie and Euro-classical paradigms. |
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Nowadays, though, consumer trends increasingly interfere with the natural rhythm of the farmers' calendar. |
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She seemed to be wearing tights, and slippers that struck the floor lightly in rhythm with the song she played. |
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He uses refined colloquial language with a rhythm that is light and quick, an unhesitating flow that propels the poem and carries the reader. |
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The strongest hand of The Cincinnati Kid is that it captures the highs and lows and natural rhythm of a marathon poker game. |
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Mid-tempo rockers dominate an album-long driving rhythm that feeds off slinkiness more than solid pounding. |
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The departing male flaps off with an unusual gliding rhythm that Kemp suspects is a loser butterfly's submissive slink. |
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Unlike some methods, the student is taught to read music and practice rhythm from day one. |
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But with rhythm and blues and soul music you don't often get the best lyrics, so for that I kind of prefer Leonard Cohen, or Bob Dylan. |
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Their guitars hammer away like sledges to anvils while the rhythm section is hot enough to melt steel! |
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The Rolling Stones evolved from Richards' and Jagger's teenage enthusiasm for black American rhythm and blues. |
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For just as with rhythm and blues, hip hop is also riddled with racial, ethnic, class, gender, and generational contradictions. |
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Off ice, Evora listens to rhythm and blues, alternative and techno music, while Ladwig will listen to anything. |
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Once the ditches have disappeared, the rhythm of tiler and slater, no hand signals, will be translated into a bag of shadows inside a furnace. |
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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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Electrodes positioned at various sites in the heart can give only limited data about intracardiac conduction during sinus rhythm at rest. |
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The classical concept of the source of cardiac rhythm is that it originates from the sino-atrial node. |
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We may weep a little rather than ululate, gnash our teeth or wail to the rhythm of a thousand drums. |
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The team moved into the Charleston rhythm with a midline step sequence which was fast and and contained lots of turns and twizzles throughout. |
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Alternatively, you can have a monitor fitted that records your heart rhythm over a 24-hour period. |
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The patient may be placed on a cardiac monitor to observe the heart rate and rhythm at all times. |
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Occasionally he tapped the ash, a momentary pause in the almost mechanical rhythm of the smoking. |
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His mission has been to create an addictive MMO that has the pick-up-put-down rhythm of a casual game. |
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Dancers can get fascinated with the biomechanical specificity of their technique, neglecting rhythm and phrasing. |
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Impatience manifesting in rudeness or shortness is symptomatic of a rhythm problem. |
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Many local accents are marked by a rhythm that tends to lengthen stressed vowels and to reduce or eliminate unstressed short vowels. |
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Last year I developed an abnormal heart rhythm and had to be shocked with electrocardioversion to get back into normal rhythm. |
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If it is needed, a defibrillating shock interrupts the potentially lethal rhythm and gives it the chance to start beating normally. |
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Built-in computers analyze the person's heart rhythm and interpret the rhythms that require defibrillation shocks. |
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It recognises the abnormal rhythm as soon as it starts and sends a small shock to the heart, which quickly stops the arrhythmia. |
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For two 50-minute sets the crowd shrugged and shimmied to the rhythm of a more blithe and brilliant era. |
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Praise must go to the four-man rhythm section who power the album's mostly mid tempo grooves. |
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Chocolate Girl's main mix will get you shaking and the mid tempo rhythm is quite enjoyable. |
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Three sets of drums kept the rhythm steady, flanking him while he bellowed the song's opening lyrics. |
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Here, as in Harper's later volumes, musical rhythm replaces traditional metrics in the poetry without sacrificing craft. |
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Gerber's handling of rhythm especially impresses me, with a mastery of the phrase against the meter. |
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And in the back is the sturdy session man, Mr. White, pounding out the rhythm that brings it all together. |
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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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A couple of beery city boys with no rhythm have latched onto a couple of drunk reggae girls. |
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Your feet move, too, in rhythm with the hands, to help create smooth movements. |
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It all started with an underlying rhythm from a beatbox that we'd bought in Chinatown, then Bob played guitar to that. |
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Its childish simplicity, with cheap cha-cha beatbox rhythm and wobbly guitar, is both disarming and strangely poignant. |
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Every song is similar in that the beat has great rhythm and is very smooth. |
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Everyone plays different beats at the same time so they really feel the rhythm through their hands and can work out where they fit in. |
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So as well as adjusting to the time difference from England, there's the different rhythm to the day. |
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It was one long string of notes, connected not in harmony or key, but with semblances of consistency that emerge in rhythm and timbre. |
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This recording is exciting, gorgeous, weaving the rhythm of the drum with melodious strings, wind instruments and female chant. |
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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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In addition, David says melody and rhythm are most important to him in composing music. |
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Get Back pumps along on a resonant thrum of drums and chiming rhythm guitar. |
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Slowly, a rhythm grew inside my bosom, resulting in a pulsating throb of emotion from the bow to the instrument. |
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Her heart had pounded every second of the dinner, beating a rhythm that seemed to throb his name. |
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The place throbbed to the rhythm of pneumatic drills as dozens of new tourist complexes took shape to cater for local demand. |
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Riffs are what happens when you leave the rhythm guitarist and the bassist alone in the studio for a couple of hours. |
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He plays standard lead and rhythm electric guitar, lap steel and slide guitar, bass, and mandolin, all equally well. |
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I heard the first few measures of Mozart's third violin concerto in my head set to the rhythm of the crude chant. |
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The first four measures sound practiced and include accurate articulation, steady rhythm and even a dynamic shade or two. |
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Add probably the best rhythm section in town right now and it's a fabulous, stirring noise. |
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Add a rhythm section to your youthful band with our wood and skin Tambourine. |
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I think the most difficult our rhythm will ever get is having a thirty-second note somewhere in there. |
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Arrangement and general performance will each attract 40 points, with tone and rhythm equally sharing the remainder. |
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The rider who can set a steady rhythm with her seat can help the green horse through these awkward stages. |
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The colours on the canvas merge into the music as the dancers whip up a rhythm with their graceful movements. |
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The rhythm of a masculine voice flows well with altering images on the monitors. |
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Vaudevillian attempts at wacky accents and screwball banter lack rhythm and come off as flat as week-old pop. |
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It turns out that the emphasis in ballroom is in posture, rhythm and grace, and the steps weren't any more advanced than we've been learning. |
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The rhythm and tone of Jacobi's voice is complemented by classical ballet music and original music by Paul Grabowsky. |
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A man on the traffic signal above us started beating a Mardi Gras rhythm on a pot. |
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The rhythm isn't really a waltz or a march, but rather a stumbling sort of gait, indicative of what was to come in the next few years. |
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The travel was slow and easy, though the men kept a steady rhythm in their march, their minds dwelling on their families back home. |
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The band's subtly supportive rhythm section is a strong element that buoys each of their numbers. |
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My whole body gets into the rhythm and tempo of the motion I'm going to use. |
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Down the back straight for the last time the pace quickened again and I started to row in rhythm with the horse. |
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Once you find a rhythm your body likes, you won't even know you are burning hundreds of calories an hour. |
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All year long the war drums have been beating an insistent tattoo but recently the rhythm seemed to be leading nowhere. |
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An inability to catch, throw or even roll the balls on target would affect the concentration and rhythm of the contestants. |
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I don't know a more seductive syncopated rhythm than that of the Sapphic stanza with its three long lines and one short one. |
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His guitar is a gristly sandblast to the eardrums, buzzing over a keyed-up rhythm section, and the raw mix doesn't shave off the edges. |
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Great drummers understand that drums are not only a rhythm instrument, that they are melodic as well. |
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Calypso according to Duke is our current editorial in song, timely in lyrical content and rhythm and relevant to said time and place. |
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Meanwhile, a distinct rhythm of drumming for a war dance is audible in the present. |
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Music for the lute was written in tablature, indicating which strings were to be stopped on which frets, with the rhythm noted above. |
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This was no easy arrest to manage, as the heart rhythm alternated between ventricular fibrillation and asystole. |
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These are days when there is more rhythm and flow to his bowling, his run-up and action blending better. |
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There is frequently poor closure of periods and an inept employment of rhythm in the closure of stanzas and of poems. |
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Schools taught the young by rhythm first, and then with simple striding chords, and eventually with artless tunes. |
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She executed a rhythm tap dancing routine in the 1928 musical Cross My Heart which stopped the show cold every night. |
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Again the same tactic of constant rhythm was employed and we eventually rowed them down. |
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The answer is they have all been affected by types of arrhythmia, or heart rhythm disorders. |
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An arrhythmia may cause the heart's rhythm to be irregular, abnormally fast, or abnormally slow. |
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Most compositions are swirling masses of intense orchestration mixed once again with this signature drum 'n' bass lite rhythm programming. |
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Their music used electronic amplification, and was more closely allied to the emerging styles of rhythm and blues and rock and roll. |
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Holly pioneered the dark, fast beat of rhythm and blues, and let bop become rock and roll. |
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Each of these rhythm and blues legends had the hall rocking to the sounds of the Sixties. |
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Equally at home singing in English, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Lingala, and Kincongo, he brings energy, rhythm and excitement to his music. |
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At 28 he should now be at his peak, but it seems that he is obsessed with speed and lacks rhythm and control. |
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On rare occasions it has been associated with heart rhythm abnormalities and heart attacks. |
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Perhaps the most well known type of Venezuelan music is a rhythm called the joropo. |
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Churchill drove himself hard but drove his subordinates harder, for they had to fit into the rhythm of his working day. |
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Students then jackknife their legs even closer to their bodies to the rhythm of a driving beat. |
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She held the stage like few solo singers can with her spellbinding vocals and her guitar work which combined rhythm and lead work. |
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They're textbooks on how strings, horns, brass, rhythm and vocal should be laid down. |
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They have cadence and a rhythm together, moving together easily, even in tight spaces. |
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Pat Kelly on the washboard played with ten thimbles on his fingers and gave great rhythm to the band. |
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Behind the Cliffside Inn, I heard a fiddle and a mandolin, keeping rhythm on an old washboard and stomping on the floor. |
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I should mention that I found at least two wrongly notated rhythm patterns. |
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Include and inspire younger siblings through clapping, responsive singing and simple accompaniments on rhythm instruments. |
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The album showcases the importance the band places on rhythm over pure volume. |
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Later in Europe bones provided the rhythm to jigs and reels normally played on violin. |
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Give the name on the byline an italic touch, and somehow the visual rhythm of the text may be altered for the better. |
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A motormouth jitterbug with a shiny dome, he was the X factor, goosing the rhythm and galvanizing the offense. |
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Moochin has a decisive Latin American feel, with rich ensembles, intricate horn and rhythm lines and a feisty alto solo from Joel Purnell. |
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Let your arms swing naturally and in rhythm with your legs and loosely cup your hands. |
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Taking them off means feeling the floor, the temperature and slipperiness of the surface, the rhythm of jointing in the boards. |
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She began to concentrate on Carl's breathing, the slow rhythm of the rise and fall of his chest, the sound of the ocean tide in the distance. |
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Our own raggamuffins and slow-track rhythm artistes are leading us to an uneasy future. |
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Inviting harmonies and well-tempered innovations in rhythm and accompaniment add to the charm. |
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This resulted in a complete lack of rhythm and short rallies punctuated by frequent drop shots. |
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Both films are vivid riots of colour, rhythm and violence, full of gun-toting gangsters and visually opulent set pieces. |
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Whatever your age, wherever you live and whoever you are, rhythm and movement are common to everyone. |
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He had a rat-a-tat style that was perfectly married to the rhythm of the game he called. |
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For an antidote to the sugary Broadway show, I always wondered if at least one of the kids had a tin ear and the rhythm of a stutterer. |
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The rock music of the 1960s had been a synthesis between Afro-American rhythm and blues and various European traditions of popular music. |
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By general consensus, he invented the devilishly complicated, deceptively simple-sounding rhythm that came to be known as Afrobeat. |
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It will be able to project a light that glows in rhythm with the heartbeat of the runners. |
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At a time when recordings are showing the virtues of an airy, singer-centered style in Handel, the old square rhythm is hard to support. |
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It's an intoxicating read, and one which eventually develops a rhythm all its own. |
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The cupboard door kept swinging open only to be thumped closed by Ivan, who had incorporated this gesture into the rhythm of the dance. |
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The golden measure of poetry does not yet exist, only the rhythm of the maracas, the exact sound of the kettledrum. |
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And from its midst rises the rhythm and lilt and melody and meaning of words. |
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There's almost no revamping of Baroque or Classical keyboard fingerings, and the rhythm taps out more lyrically than I find in Stravinsky. |
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One bird had the same rhythm and sound as my alarm clock and kept waking me up. |
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All this is neatly capped off with strong soulful vocals, tasty guitar work, and the light and shade of the band's rhythm section. |
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The tide was in, and it washed under us and around, spraying through the holes in the floor, giving us the rhythm and the flavor of the sea. |
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He takes stock, finds that his heart seems to be keeping steady rhythm again, and rises, bracing himself against the knobby trunk of the tree. |
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Most of it simply buzzes and squeaks, a reedy clarinet against a rhythm section of cash registers and ticker tape. |
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Steve Wilson's vibes are deep in the rhythm section's pocket, riffing or firing off spare, hanging chords. |
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A veteran DJ listened hard and found magic, effectively an alchemist of rhythm and melody. |
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Here ink spots clearly are ink spots, and Kalina employs them in a carefree punctuation that sets up a joyful rhythm across the sheet. |
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Valery adheres to a rhythm of alexandrines in stanza five, yet the lines do not progress in an even manner. |
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Traditional poetry, with its innate rhythm and alliteration, as well as free verse focusing on social issues, flowed from her pen. |
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Johnson said he had come up with the rollicking piano riffs and trademark rhythm backing Berry's lyrics. |
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His heart began to beat a furious rhythm inside his ribcage and his throat constricted tightly in fear. |
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Aalto's trademark ribs of cobalt blue tiles impart a lively rhythm to the angled wall that faces the bank of elevators. |
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I was drawn deeper into sleep as I listened to Mother's sweet song with the natural beat and rhythm of the sea accompanying her. |
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Sometimes it felt like the rhythm section were racing the guitars to see who could get to the end of the song first. |
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Of course, technical guitar work and a tight rhythm section don't alone outweigh Tim's caterwauling. |
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The melodic content is brought further to the foreground with the lack of a jazz rhythm section and traditional jazz harmony. |
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And these young men all had girlfriends on whom they practised the rhythm method with breathtaking inaccuracy. |
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By now, I take it, the rhythm method of contraception must have passed out of favour. |
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The lagerphone is a traditional bush rhythm instrument, made from bottle tops nailed to a hoe handle. |
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Jim Bridges and Cory Papirny are the house band rhythm section this time around. |
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Her 16-year-old brother Rick is on lead guitar, dad Paul on rhythm guitar and veteran Beat Boy Ronnie Carr on bass. |
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The National Academies Building acknowledges its historic context through a rhythm of voids and projections in the facades. |
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Muse on vital need for split-second timing but also metronomic rhythm when playing farce. |
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Joseph of course had played rhythm guitar, while Evander had sung and played lead guitar. |
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What follows is a fuzzed and phased rhythm guitar workout over which Orridge sings through distorting filters. |
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He was not just a straight-ahead, three-chord folkie, but he created a harmonic fusion of folk, jazz, rhythm and blues, and soul stylings. |
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The song bolts out with an anticipatory, pulsing rhythm under a soprano sax solo. |
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The Palace of Justice expresses order and power and consists of a rhythm of eight law courts and a high court. |
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This unstable heart rhythm produces an ineffective heartbeat, causing insufficient blood flow to vital organs. |
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This requires that all zooidal walls grew independently of the rhythm of feeding polypide cycles. |
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The languid, back-and-forth rhythm of a swaying swing slows time on a lazy summer day. |
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A gentle and lyrical andantino in triple time with a lilting rhythm and an emotional central section ended intimately, in stillness. |
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Lippa's music, though idiomatic, is not rich in melody, depending largely on rhythm and harmony. |
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When bands break up, everyone from the lead singer to the rhythm guitarist releases a solo album. |
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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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Dave wrote the songs and played lead guitar, and we had rhythm guitar, bass, and me on drums. |
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Later the hotel's chefs took to the stage and made their own finely choreographed rendition of a dance and rhythm extraodinaire! |
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As they danced, the rhythm of the song and dance matched the rhythm of the music. |
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Maybe you've realized you have two left feet, skewed rhythm and zero coordination. |
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Her bare feet created a rhythm of their own as she moved all over the floor, lunging and retracting, parrying invisible foes. |
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I longed to get a steady rhythm going and muttered impatiently that we had a mountain to climb. |
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She started moving in the rhythm of the music, dancing for herself, her eyes half-closed. |
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Similar to the way that dance relies to a great extent on music for rhythm and expression, dance in this piece wouldn't work without the set. |
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The rhyme and rhythm of Alborough's duck tales, with their bold, easy-to-follow images, make them ideal for reading aloud. |
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At least those who were there got a sample of this artist's talent for rhythm and rhyme. |
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Peripheral pulses also should be measured for rate and rhythm and to rule out coarctation of the aorta. |
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It took him awhile to get back to sleep, but finally he did, and I watched him, listening to the strong rhythm of his heart. |
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I held out my hand, which he took warmly into his and we danced around the ancient memory, dancing to the music and to the rhythm of the night. |
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Her stories, told in nonsense verse, are fast-paced with a rhythm that carries through its pages. |
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I identified with his heroes, laughed at his jokes, loved the vernacular power and rhythm of his prose. |
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She found herself making up a song, to the slow rhythm of his regular breathing, to the tune of her thoughts. |
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Similarly, the most soothing music usually beats at about 70 to 80 tones per minute, which resembles the natural rhythm of a heartbeat. |
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As a result, your stroke will be shorter, your rhythm will be off and you'll probably swim slower than you're capable of doing. |
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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 tough, touching account of a young life redundantly snuffed out by police prejudice is steeped in musical rhythm and fluidity. |
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They introduced rhythm and rhyme into medieval poetry and wrote both in Latin and in the vernacular. |
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Rentfrow thinks that personality clues are conveyed in the music's tempo, rhythm and lyrics. |
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The use of rhythm is usually absent, in favor of floating bass and bubbling sine waves. |
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Chapters cover finding notes on the piano, hand positioning and an introduction to rhythm and musical notation. |
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My approach to classical ballet technique is relatively plain, and with an emphasis on rhythm and musical phrasing. |
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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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Lucian started up behind her, rapping out a short, simple rhythm to trigger the rest of the instruments. |
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The whole piece is structured around rhythm, rhythm produced by various musical instruments used in different parts of India. |
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It sets the rhythm of life in this archipelago and is a pulsating hub that blends the Oriental with the Occidental, the mundane with extraordinary. |
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A minute into the track, Avi Bortnick's choppy wah-wah rhythm guitar kick starts proceedings, closely followed by Jesse Murphy on bass and drummer Adam Deitch. |
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A car parked at a red light honked its horn in rhythm with the chant as the crowd passed in front of it. |
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The horns front a rhythm section that includes three percussionists armed with congas and bata drums, with no piano or guitar in the middle to mediate. |
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This discovery consists in giving up the musical rhythm and replacing it with the rhythmic word, according to the accentuation and necessities of the texts. |
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Use guitar and some rhythm instruments as the accompaniment. |
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Lighting signals your body's circadian rhythm and can have a strong effect on your mood. |
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Baffling the meteorologists and weathermen and upsetting the rhythm of life of millions, the Monsoon failed last year despite the predictions of good rain. |
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Lipstick had stroked a thin line across her lips, while delicately manicured and bejewelled fingers beat out an impatient rhythm on the menu cover. |
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I never got a definitive answer, but I think he was used to having a rhythm section that would not be that dynamic under him. |
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It is true that the wretched weather has left them short of match practice and there is little cricket over the next few days in which to get their rhythm back. |
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The lambada is also from northeastern Brazil, and she capitulated to the current fad with two lambadas, but the rhythm is staid compared with most of her other material. |
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The instruments included three rhythm sections, bongo drums, piano, a full complement of brass, saxophones, flutes, clarinets, guitars and even two bassoons. |
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With estimable discipline, Smith's inquiry anatomizes vocal volume and pitch, yet rhythm receives scant attention and, not surprisingly, scrutiny of poetic meter is wanting. |
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A lot of the scenes in the tent, at the beginning, had to be reshot because they didn't have the right rhythm to set the film on the right footing from the beginning. |
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I believe learnability is a very important factor of rhythm games. |
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Within a few minutes he had lost his rhythm as the mare suddenly stopped short and he started bouncing uncomfortably on the tough leather of the saddle. |
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It has been postulated that normal development may include the establishment of a circadian rhythm in the secretion of arginine vasopressin, the antidiuretic hormone. |
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I also have to acknowledge the influence that music has on my work as it contributes to the studio atmosphere and establishes the rhythm for making art. |
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There is a retinal torquing of the field color that is pushed further by the interlocking order of the columns, which establishes a sequential rhythm or pulse. |
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The most common causes include thickening of heart muscle and irregularities of the electrical impulses that control the natural rhythm of the heart. |
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The Appendix contains nine short rhythm and pattern exercises that Attwood provided in his original edition and they are well suited to the level of the music. |
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On record, he is a master of filling spaces with innovative licks, whilst still leaving enough room for the music's swing and rhythm to ease the tunes along. |
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I need my little musical rhythm to wrap me up and shush me tenderly as I wonder about the black-haired girl, and the basilisks in the hotel lobby. |
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The octometric ground rhythm is firmly established in the first two lines. |
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For me, the key to finding my natural rhythm is familiarity. |
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In the third movement, Tennstedt found a certain sense of formal rhythm that is in perfect balance with the drive and impetus that he generates in the fourth. |
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People with no sense of rhythm try to clap along to the music. |
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So the short rhythm just works better for you than a longer narrative. |
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In the underground cellar bars and cafes of San Francisco, performance poetry was blending the rhyme and rhythm of the spoken word with free jazz. |
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Coast dwellers are accustomed to the daily rhythm of the tides, which are primarily lulled in and out by the gentle gravitational tug of the moon. |
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The two rhythm tappers, now both 29, make a handsome couple. |
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Some futurists have said that we'll need to be more inventive, creative, and flexible to handle the tasks, flow and rhythm of life in this century and beyond. |
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The body's natural rhythm of waking and sleeping is about 25 hours. |
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George Benson, the man who some 30 plus years ago made the crossover from jazz to rhythm and blues, soul and pop, belongs very much in the latter category. |
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The initial musical spark was built around a mixture of highly incongruous styles, including medieval folk, bossa nova, soul, rhythm and blues, and jazz. |
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Second, while many festivals seek to preserve the Delta blues, most feature a variety of musical styles, including rhythm and blues, soul, gospel, and rock and roll. |
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An important nerve in reggae's musical spinal cord came directly from African American rhythm and blues and soul music and the evolving folk music movement. |
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Ollie Bayston's voice veers between Robert Smith and Richard Ashcroft while beating out electric piano riffs, which borrow from 60's and 70's rhythm and blues. |
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Adapting quickly to new circumstances, he decided to stock up on rap, rhythm and blues, and jazz cassettes to market to African Americans in Harlem. |
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However, Palo Alto have some good, original material which together with a solid rhythm section and some excellent guitar work certainly hits my spot. |
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When you hear the rhythm of the guitar playing faster as you fight through a wall of enemies, then you'll understand the importance and stress on music. |
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The injuries also robbed him of his rhythm during the season. |
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His eyes were darting around frantically, his left leg bounced with a steady, arrhythmic, annoying rhythm and he was wringing his hands consistently. |
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Even as the audience rushed to get out of the hall, before the mandatory half-an-hour's load-shedding got up with them, the rhythm of tribal music was in them. |
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The lightness and lucidity of the glass concourse is exchanged for the more brooding atmosphere of massive concrete walls and the muscular rhythm of the steel structure. |
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I learned from those articles, lessons about rhythm and pacing and when to stick the dagger in and when to sheath it. |
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At this point, he attaches his often-heard mechanical beater to his tam-tam, and for the next three minutes he allows it largely to dictate the rhythm of his playing. |
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When she eventually opened a dance studio, she hadn't heard of rhythm tap. |
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Hitting precise aggressive rhythm patterns with percussive attacks, his dynamic technique and lengthy performances reflected his dedication to tap dance. |
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After discharge, patients recorded and transmitted their rhythm by telephone daily and whenever they had symptoms suggestive of atrial fibrillation. |
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To this end, students used tempera to create abstract-expressionist paintings that emphasize the visual elements of line, shape, color, rhythm and composition. |
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It is a cynical camouflage for problems caused by the boom and bust rhythm of capitalism, and the bosses' insistence that profits come before people. |
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Recent web typography articles stress that good typography requires a vertical grid, that is to say a solid vertical rhythm achieved with a consistent, measured line-height. |
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The duo play multiple instruments and both have an ear for finding rhythm tracks by recording clocks ticking, bells ringing and lawnmowers mowing. |
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The rhythm on the monitor was ventricular fibrillation, random electrical oscillations. |
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His music focuses on the social and economic issues that affect the daily lives of ordinary people, and is influenced by the traditional mbira and drumming rhythm of his clan. |
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The best stuff is from the early seventies, when the murky, basic production and tight rhythm section set up a selection of exciting guitar thrashes. |
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It throbs like the heartbeat of a newborn or the rhythm of a drum. |
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Though it still makes liberal use of the massive sound of the ngoma, Tandala departs from heavy rhythm on some tracks for the softer sounds of a simple thumb piano and vocals. |
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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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I watched his semaphoric interchange with the conductor, his head-tip, cocking an ear toward his own hands, his right foot in rhythm with his senses on the pedal. |
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He is lightly beating out a rhythm which gradually increases in intensity. |
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I took the drumsticks back and started beating a rhythm out. |
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Kraftwerk used and combined synthesizers, vocoders, custom-built sequencers, rudimentary rhythm boxes, and home made drum pads in a fashion unlike anything previously heard. |
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So you'll often see them in the mornings, standing, staring into space, with their little tootsies beating some silent syncopated rhythm on the grass. |
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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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As Jim settled into the rhythm of riding, he began to think rationally. |
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In microgravity and normal gravity, the period of the rhythm was longer when the animals were exposed to constant light than if they were kept in constant darkness. |
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At the highway, Lucius picked up a rhythm of hoofs and fell to his knees behind a shallow berm, thinly screened from the road by a stand of brush. |
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When the band was first formed, the idea of fusing rhythm based music from Africa and beyond with melodious trad from Ireland seemed like a curious and exciting experiment. |
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Implanted in the chest, the ICD is a small electronic device which shocks the heart back into a healthy rhythm if it detects an abnormal heartbeat. |
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In the experimental group, 72 patients with a shockable rhythm were initially shocked by first responders and 85 patients by the ambulance personnel. |
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Your circadian rhythm is regulated by a biological clock in your brain that usually makes you sleepy at night and ready to wake up in the morning. |
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In such works as the Homeric epics, stock formulas served to maintain the rhythm of the verse and were mnemonically useful for performers and listeners alike. |
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The rhythm of the engine, the shrillness of the whistle and the lyrical quality of the train trailing off from the place are a part of the lives here. |
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The Miles Davis rhythm section were busy men and Pepper was blessed to have such stellar players available for the one day, because the final product is excellent. |
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Although this medicine has been used to treat heart failure for more than 200 years, its role in patients with congestive heart failure and sinus rhythm is still debatable. |
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A normal heart rhythm is one in which each heartbeat originates in the sinus node and proceeds normally through the rest of the body's electric conduction system. |
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Without expectations of the big dramatic event or the boffo laugh, the rhythm of the voice makes manifest a yearning that might be spiritual or romantic. |
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