I'd told him on our first date that the most romantic thing for me would be to have a guy that could serenade me. |
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Later, your musicians can serenade the guests at the beginning of the wedding breakfast. |
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The Romance, from 1929, was originally going to be part of a string serenade. |
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You need to tell us how you were reciting epic poetry, and making her swoon with a beautiful serenade! |
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When it comes to impressing your future someone, no amount of borrowed tunes can beat a handmade serenade. |
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Whisper sweet nothings in her ear, enchant her with roses and a serenade and woo her and make her swoon. |
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When she emerges fresh faced and sleepy from below deck after a night of passion, greeted by a serenade from the crew, it took my breath away. |
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Suddenly, one lonely songbird pierced the wall of silence with a stunning serenade. |
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The rhythmic beating of hooves, and jingle of the harness fell into sync with the serenade of the forest. |
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His seventh and eighth symphonies get an occasional airing, as do the serenade for strings and the robust violin concerto. |
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At the end of the meal he surprised her with a serenade by a gentleman who sang something French to her. |
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Barbarina and some peasant girls, including Cherubino in disguise, come to serenade the Countess. |
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The male will follow the female during this period and serenade her with grunts and humming. |
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In the 18th century a serenade was a piece of instrumental music of up to ten movements, scored for a small ensemble, usually with a predominance of wind instruments. |
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Ross did ask him to discontinue an impromptu serenade of Terri, who was embarrassed and upset by her ex-husband singing love songs to her over the plane's microphone. |
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Yet serenade for Strings in C Major sounded nothing like the Nutcracker or Swan Lake. |
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For her birthday, her father hired a band that would show up at her doorstep to serenade her. |
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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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For those who have consulted dictionaries for the word, its typical appearance between serenade and serene may bring a sense of tranquility and unruffled repose. |
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Mynah birds and cardinals serenade beach goers and picnickers alike. |
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A serenade is a musical composition generally performed in the evening, in someone's honour. |
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The most patent serenade, however, is reserved for Ein Ständchen Euch zu bringen, in which the swaggering Don Juan is more caught up in his own virtuosity and charisma than in any sincere romantic outpouring. |
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Renowned for its European charm, the streets of Old Quebec are lined with boutiques and cafés. Horse-drawn carriages clip-clop past stately heritage homes and musicians serenade passers-by. |
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Birds and amphibians have long been known to croon in the presence of a potential mate, but among mammals only humans, whales and bats were thought to serenade a possible partner. |
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The vividness of this song lies in the simultaneous intertwining of the sinuous serenade with the helpless frustration of the girl, cloistered in her bedroom. |
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For example in 1782 he received a commission from Prince Alois I of Liechtenstein, who ordered a serenade for one of his banquets, but imposed the condition that it must be ready within 48 hours. |
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As a student at the National Ballet School in Toronto, I danced Serenade, and my god, that was amazing! |
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His Serenade to Eve gently pulses in a relaxed style intended to make the lady smile. |
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They waltzed to Tchaikovsky's waltzes from The Nutcracker and Swan Lake, and the Waltz from Dvorak's Serenade for Strings. |
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Called Serenade, the Victoria Road shop was serving its first customers today. |
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This new CD has two works from the 1960s, Deux Preludes for flute, clarinet and bassoon and the three-movement Serenade for wind quintet and chamber orchestra. |
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His poor control of a decrescendo on a long, high note in the first song rings alarm bells, and his richness of timbre deserts him in Serenade florentine. |
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Now, Glenn Miller as every jazz enthusiast will know, is the legendary U.S. trombonist and bandleader whose signature tune was Moonlight Serenade. |
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Orchestral works composed during the subsequent years in Worcestershire include the Serenade for Strings and Three Bavarian Dances. |
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Britten's Serenade opened wonderfully with West's rendition of the Prologue on natural harmonics. |
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Sno Serenade takes the nine-furlong handicap, Raahin the mile-and-six heat, and Carotic just holds Tranquil Waters in the ten-furlong maiden. |
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As in the Serenade, Britten set words by a range of poets, who here include Shakespeare, Coleridge, Keats, Shelley, Tennyson and Wilfred Owen. |
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Live concert tapings include the Serenade to Music, and the Fifth Symphony, recorded in 1951 and 1952, respectively. |
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Joined by the David Benoit Trio and members of the Asia America Symphony Orchestra, this concert includes the beautiful and enchanting Serenade for Strings by Tchaikovsky. |
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