The finale is for full orchestra with unison horns and trumpets rousingly playing Purcell's theme at the end. |
|
Rather than heckling and preventing the speakers from talking, they held up the signs in unison to show their agreement or disagreement. |
|
Soon she heard Dorset's determined footsteps return in unison with another. |
|
The wrists didn't move much but his students simultaneously snapped skyward in unison. |
|
The silver frame, black Enhancer and black fillet work in unison to balance with the colors in the art and add drama to the completed design. |
|
The horse leapt out of the stable doors, kicking them open in unison with the thunder. |
|
The horn section of the RAAF Central Band blow in unison during the first concert of the Tour de Force II Tour. |
|
The marching of our feet rings out in unison, an endless drone accompanied by the clattering hooves of the knights' horses. |
|
Note that the cymbals are played in unison with four other types of instruments. |
|
They made them drill and drill until each exercise was preformed in unison and with military precision. |
|
Let us join in chorus, just this once, harmonised or in unison, for I care not, and state our position for all Infinity to know and comprehend. |
|
The asymmetric rhythms of their unison duet invigorated the music's persistence. |
|
A flock of 10,000 to 20,000 dowitchers in Nevada's Stillwater National Wildlife Refuge moves in unison. |
|
In No Closer the company of six performed a multitude of unison sections, which helped to create a celebratory scene. |
|
Naharin makes his impact using straight-to-the-heart music and spine-tingling unison phrases from his reckless dancers. |
|
A few minutes after the last endgate closed, all six shuttles silently rose in unison from the meadow. |
|
What marks the Copper family tradition as distinctive is that this collective singing was not simply unison singing. |
|
In order for a team or group to be successful everyone must work hard, in unison, and pull their weight. |
|
A few black birds swooped into the air, almost in unison, then dived down again as if doing some sort of dance. |
|
The C major Trio Op. 87 has a more mysterious air about it, turning in on itself after the confidence of the opening unison theme. |
|
|
There is an overdependence on unison writing between the alto and bass, and most of the drum lines are unimaginative and monotonous. |
|
As a child, the only music I experienced was unison hymn singing with no formal leader, accompanied by an enthusiastic piano. |
|
Occasionally they pair up for dazzling unison lines, giving the lie to any idea that this is just some after hours jam session. |
|
After struggling 27 kilometres up hill and down dale today, the relief is so palpable that I can almost hear all my limbs sigh in unison. |
|
Two huge English gals with shoulders like walruses breasted the waves in perfect unison. |
|
Basically, from what I'm gathering from this article, its about how complex biological spontaneously act in unison. |
|
The women screamed in unison all eager to be the object of Joe's attention if only for a second, but all too timid to volunteer. |
|
Politicians make for an unedifying spectacle when they are cattle-prodded by party policy into squirming and writhing in unison. |
|
Which is that this is a competition gone off at half-cock, or rather, two competitions misfiring in unison. |
|
One of the tenor saxes also played the lead in unison with the clarinet, but an octave lower. |
|
Music, cinematography, and direction all work in unison, creating a sequence of terrible beauty. |
|
An enormous dense cloud of the insects swarmed out of their dwelling in angry unison. |
|
In unison, we asked the proprietor how he ended up so far from his homeland. |
|
Greg and I paddle in silent unison, gliding the canoe, matched in motivation and intent. |
|
This is a rare phenomenon in which the lightning bugs in an area flash in unison. |
|
In unison, we all broke out in a stirring rendition of the Canadian national anthem. |
|
Characters speak in unison, repeat phrases obsessively, deliver lines supine on the floor, break up sentences illogically, or mumble sotto voce. |
|
The system uses combinations of moves on the right analog stick or both analog sticks in unison to produce a specific deke result. |
|
The box was fashioned of antique burnished rosewood, with brass cylinders and myriad bells all working in perfectly refined unison. |
|
The company beat out rhythms with their canes, hoisting them overhead and twirling them in unison, their footwork crisp in Morse code mode. |
|
|
He rode two horses at the same time, standing astride with one leg on each horse, as they cantered in unison around the sawdust circle. |
|
Both Becca and Kade saluted as soon as they caught sight of the Admiral, snapping to attention almost in unison. |
|
Professional workers expect to act autonomously, requiring a greater need to ensure that they act in unison with the organization. |
|
Intonation, a command of decrescendo and true unison, and just plain running out of breath become the technical challenges singers must meet. |
|
They are the cynosure of all eyes with their remarkable somersaults cutting across each other's paths in perfect unison. |
|
The piece begins with an unobtrusive, chant-like unison across the strings, which develops with pastoral grace. |
|
Lord Jonathan entered the castle along with the other knights and soldiers who marched in unison behind them. |
|
They are supposed to be foolproof and guaranteed to keep horses and jockeys safe, and to open in unison. |
|
The instruction was followed immediately as they stepped out in unison before moving one step to the right. |
|
We went whale watching and saw two grey whales spurting in unison, dolphins, more sea lions and a sea otter. |
|
Champagne corks were popping in unison with the fireworks as people celebrated. |
|
It was a hybrid of pointe work and pseudo-oriental port de bras woven into unison formations. |
|
When the action gets good, the crowd chants in unison, fists pumping in the air. |
|
There can be no flubs or hesitations as both men say many lines together, in exact unison, to an unrelenting rhythm. |
|
Another oft-stated rule was that a perfect 5th, unison, or octave should be approached by the nearest imperfect interval. |
|
Another redhead came and both of them widened their eyes in unison, looking more and more like two bolls of cotton, when they saw me. |
|
Hoots and cheers from the other side of the interview room's one-way mirror make Martina and Mike flush in unison. |
|
When copying Monteverdi's Ahi dolente partita on pp.410-11, each occurrence of a unison between the two cantus parts is marked with a cross. |
|
People of all ages, backgrounds and political persuasions joined together in unison. |
|
Nor are the tables arranged in long rows, as they are in Germany, all the better to sway in unison to the tunes of raucous drinking songs. |
|
|
Everything works in unison to find clever and accessible ways to make the complicated bi-level story structure easy to follow. |
|
During the readings, the monks and the members of the public will read the Tripitaka aloud in unison. |
|
The live dancers perform alongside their own images on film, in unison or in canon or counterpoint. |
|
The bushes rustled sharply, there were five twangs in unison and five arrows shot out of nowhere and flew at him. |
|
The priests quickly gathered into a tight clustered circle, all of them chanting in unison. |
|
And those closing strains die away, and the finale begins, a faint chorus of distant voices singing in unison, the orchestra silent. |
|
This opens strikingly with the high voices singing unaccompanied in unison. |
|
The whole of the Stadium is banging its collective head, like 55,000 bobbleheads bobbing in unison. |
|
He taught that power was a must, yet it must be total power that included muscle, mind, and ki working in unison. |
|
The tunes passed across the generations by memory are sung in unison without any musical accompaniment. |
|
They had spoken in unison, with quickly flashing grins sliding onto their lips. |
|
When these elements are working in unison, they can provide maximum performance, efficiency and roof life. |
|
But seeing them dance and performing in unison, not a step out of place, makes one believe that they can hear the music in their head. |
|
During that powerful event, Sri Rudram, a much-revered propitiatory hymn to Lord Siva from the Yajur Veda, was chanted in unison 1,331 times. |
|
They punched the air and shouted in unison to the speeches of their leaders. |
|
When all five participants take in a deep breath, and particularly when that action is performed in unison, the lifting procedure is much easier. |
|
These three management functions must work in unison to ensure consistent direction. |
|
His voice echoed in unison with the harsh winds whipping snow in their faces. |
|
As a corollary to their sequestration, the sisters have developed a kind of incantatory and interchangeable speech, often speaking in unison. |
|
These rendered plainchant in unison, either as a body or antiphonally across the choir. |
|
|
They are the ones known intimately by cartoon cognoscenti, often memorized line-for-line and take-for-take, recited in unison by gleeful aficionados. |
|
In a half-circle around a blazing campfire, the women shake rattles in creepy unison. |
|
They are bound to have different takes on the action but they were in unison when admitting that it was one of their best friendlies of the pre-season. |
|
The frantic and furious beating took on the dimension and character of a collective crew of railroaders pounding spikes in unison on a stretch of track. |
|
By the end of the session she had all the teachers, old and young, jumping and yelling, twirling and growling in unison, having a whale of a time. |
|
Watch it with friends and let the subtle observational humour win you over until the smile washes over your face and you laugh in unison like lightly tickled hyenas. |
|
The look combines two disparate classes of the dickensian world, shown in unison to cool effect. |
|
It allows my animus and anima to express themselves in unison. |
|
The guns raised in unison, the sighting of the game, the rounds of shots, the thud as a prey is felled, and then the silence. |
|
A large dugong and calf had just surfaced for air and I turned round in time to watch their rounded torsos arc in unison and with a swirl of their tails, they disappeared. |
|
Ailey had fully experienced the thrill that ripples through a Broadway theater when a line of spiffy dancers sashays in unison towards the edge of the stage. |
|
We sobbed in unison when Meryl Streep could barely talk about her husband without becoming visibly verklempt and touched. |
|
From the very first scene, when those little orphan girls begin banging their buckets on the ground in unison singing It's a Hard Knock Life, they had me. |
|
With the minimum of fuss, two masseurs, working in unison, applied hot medicated oils over my body and set about the task of coaxing the knots out of my protesting muscles. |
|
The failure of both sides of his face to act in unison shows that his real feelings don't match up with the image he is putting across to the public. |
|
She found a way to make little kitten steps to the microphone in unison with the music. |
|
It may have been said in jest, but a legion of Hollywood actresses would have nodded ruefully in unison. |
|
Studies of nurseries found that the babies moved their bowels in unison. |
|
The first of these two parts depicts a local hood who tyrannizes a family, until, having finally had enough, the family stands in unison against him. |
|
However the rousing spectacle of so many dancers performing heroic choreography in unison should not be missed, even if it does not bear repeated viewing. |
|
|
The two supporting lengths of parallel pipe swerve in unison from the back until the top pipe rears up and curves back over the sails that it also apparently is bracing. |
|
As is common in all combat sports in Thailand, the crowd roared in unison with every punch the local fighter threw, regardless of whether it landed or not. |
|
The bold opening of the Concerto on fortissimo wind in unison brings thrilling attack, leading to a very approachable work built on sharply rhythmic, often angular material. |
|
Two voices chorused as the sound of two hands hit in perfect unison. |
|
Then, presaged by a unison line of sax and trumpet, the rhythm kicks in. |
|
At the end, Zhang's king has been crushed under the weight of his own laws, facing a fearsome, unison chorus of thousands of warriors calling for blood. |
|
He said that Lutherans sing in harmony because they are too modest to sing solos, while also believing that unison singing would make them too worldly. |
|
The dynamics and technique of Uehara and the other players were quite astonishing, particularly the unison bass and piano lines on a couple of the tracks. |
|
The powerful effect of unison movement and the speed with which show steps are performed makes the choreography visually exciting to the audience. |
|
The misterioso tremolo opening of the third movement was particularly effective, likewise the unison string cantilenas and some wonderful feather-light arabesques on piano. |
|
On stage, they perform in near-perfect synchrony and unison. |
|
These electrons will oscillate in unison with the incoming light wave and can affect or modify the passage of light through matter in several ways. |
|
Cats The dancing throughout is impressive, particularly when moving in unison as a clowder of cats. |
|
Everyone moved in unison, but the sudden change in weight distribution capsized the boat. |
|
They worked completely in unison, doubling the parts in a mirror-like fashion that was a sight to behold and a sound to behear. |
|
While the spinner is making new yarn, the bobbin and the flyer turn in unison, driven by the single drive band. |
|
A widely accepted practice is for all to receive and hold the elements until everyone is served, then consume the bread and cup in unison. |
|
And then, after a few preliminary tries, the whole farm burst out into 'Beasts of England' in tremendous unison. |
|
In addition, walruses feed solitarily but are often near other walruses in small or large groups that may surface and dive in unison. |
|
The swinging also known as flourishing has developed somewhat into an art form, with drummers playing and swinging in unison or sequential flows. |
|
|
This technique is relatively new in the pipe band circuit, and in most cases require skill and timing to achieve in full unison. |
|
This suggests that they were capable of making formal agreements in unison despite supposedly having many different chieftains. |
|
In response, the audience shouted No in unison, urging him to keep writing. |
|
However, Johnson said he did not want tax rates to go up or for European Union countries to do this in unison. |
|
Its simple unison violin accompaniment and its consoling rhythms apparently brought tears to Burney's eyes. |
|
He and his dressers unbutton and unzip, unlace and re-tie in a frantic, frenzied unison. |
|
This put enormous pressure on finding a single orthography that could be used in unison. |
|
They stop and, in straight lines, practice punch and kick moves in unison. |
|
As a Smoke-filled room rose in unison to hail the Blackberry boys, this felt like Rock And Roll Again. |
|
Two performers twirled boleadoras in the air and bounced off weight on the ground, making explosive noises in unison. |
|
In unison, these features enable invasion of the dura, underlying membranes and promote leakiness that is compounded by coagulopathy. |
|
This produces the effect of another person speaking in unison with the stammerer and in most cases will reduce the wearer's stammer significantly. |
|
The gestures of the reclining woman at the start yield to 20 minutes of squiggling, spiraling, kneeling, rolling, and recovering bodies, often congealing in unison. |
|
The outside rows are tuned in unison, and always in the diatonic scale, that is, in the regular and natural scale of tones and semitones, as a peal of eight bells is tuned. |
|
Luther's service, however, included congregational singing of hymns and psalms in German, as well as of parts of the liturgy, including Luther's unison setting of the Creed. |
|
The unisons in the menuetto were achingly in tune, showing that a unison can be just as devastating in its impact as harmony when played this well. |
|
And the teenage sensation was also asked in loud unison about the merits of visiting houses of ill repute to conduct liaisons with women far older than himself. |
|
We began with the controlled rumbustiousness of Vaughan Williams' 'Wasps' Overture, with eloquent horn and violin solos and a splendid unison viola melody. |
|
Watch the guards and tackles today and see if they are patient, stepping to the side of the play in unison and keeping their shoulders square to the line of scrimmage. |
|
However, traditional Sefardi families follow the halacha that each household uses only one menorah lit by the head of the household, to represent everyone in unison. |
|
|
Two clerks who had witnessed the scene, and a chaprassi, were sent along to Mr Macgregor's office to corroborate the story. They lied in perfect unison. |
|
As English Music, Ackroyd's most poetised transposition of Englishness, illustrates, 'the song of Albion' is a multi-voiced ensemble of soloists working in unison. |
|
This bodily discipline is frequently performed in unison, by groups. |
|
When two or three of the women were supposed to be dancing in unison, arms and legs were often extended at different angles, making the dancers seem sloppy, underrehearsed. |
|
Generally speaking, all of the pipers play a unison melody on their chanters, with their drones providing the harmonic support and filling out the sound. |
|