The chorus has that air of resigned lethargy and torpor which regularly lowers over those with little or no hope. |
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We discovered a chorus of dancing girls, a few leading actors and expert camera men on our travels around the wards. |
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The historic music of that antiphonal chorus needs to be heard, and remembered. |
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For 10 years, she has been monitoring the Pacific chorus frogs' deep-throated, well-rounded ribbits. |
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For 10 years, Erickson has been monitoring the Pacific chorus frogs' deep-throated, well-rounded ribbits. |
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The chorus calling for the Fed to open its money spigots further has become deafening. |
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Soon enough the sky began to lighten, the dawn chorus started up, and a heavy dew began to form. |
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Scottish Opera bosses are cutting up rough over that leak about the chorus jobs. |
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The dance piece begins with the entry of a chorus of seven drummers and cymbalists. |
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Arms will be linked, kisses exchanged and a chorus of Auld Lang Syne belted out. |
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It's a fully staged production except for the chorus which will be in the choir loft. |
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Ask the regular cyclists, and they will chorus that the city is never friendly to them. |
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A chorus rousingly sings the full-length anthem for each branch of the military. |
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It was a unique chorus that was loosed when he and his colleagues sang their native songs in different dialects. |
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The chorus of thirteen scores points again and again with the dramatic aptness of their singing. |
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God's great glory is praised fugally by the chorus in the key of E minor established by the previous movement. |
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It was clearly not Coventry 's day, and leaving the field to a chorus of boos was no surprise. |
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Having only a croak of a voice, I managed to screech out one chorus but apart from that was blessedly relieved from the pressure to sing. |
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Fragile, lonely melodies and countermelodies reminiscent of his ambient works build into a chorus and actually take it somewhere. |
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Before the men's singles final began, a lusty chorus of Waltzing Matilda turned Wimbledon Centre Court into an Aussie outpost. |
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While the actors wore the cothurnus, the chorus appeared in their usual sandals. |
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Again, the chorus bears the brunt of the text, but there are soprano, contralto, and bass soloists. |
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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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Additional percussion is also provided by the chorus which claps specific patterns at certain points in the music. |
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It is very pleasing for me to find his imaginative qualities again set out, this time in a masque in five scenes for chorus and orchestra. |
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In Sophocles and in Seneca, the Theban chorus are almost unshakably loyal to their king. |
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He faced a chorus of disapproval during PMQs when he stood up to talk about National Carers Week. |
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The chorus of voices was so loud that the teacup on the small coffee table behind her shook. |
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A lead singer acts as cantor, while the human chain behind joins in the chorus as everyone stamps the floor rhythmically in this mantric ritual. |
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The clamour reached a feverish pitch as winners too joined the chorus of the losers in protesting against the decisions. |
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Downes conducts the orchestra and chorus like a true Italian, and he restores some of the traditional cuts, both large and small. |
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The Rat had hired three cooks, five waitresses and fifteen chorus girls for the occasion. |
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We ask you to add your voice to the growing chorus of condemnation of Australia's refugee program. |
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Surely the Phantom suffered through worse all those hours pining after that lovely chorus girl. |
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All was well and beautiful for the first 10 minutes, till a chorus of sharp voices pierced my champagne reverie. |
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The only complaint being heard around the Malton rehearsal rooms is that more chorus backup would have been useful. |
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Sometimes, the wind also brought unnervingly fell sounds with it, as if a chorus of unholy demons was singing in the distance. |
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Every so often there is a frenzy of activity, involving the chorus charging off stage or a supremely inelegant dance. |
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Wading further through the crowd, we decline a chorus of importunate hands, each holding out postcards that detail the site's glories. |
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The chorus of gotchas and the echoes of laughter I hear this morning are making my head hurt. |
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I have been told by some of the publicists associated with the movie that I'm a little impertinent to be leading any chorus in that direction. |
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In Cyrus's version, his words are backed up in the chorus and briefly in the third verse by two male voices singing in a falsetto. |
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However, hit the pause button before then, and you could probably sing the simple chorus melody before you even hear it. |
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He started in on the chorus again, crouching low on his hunkers at the side of the stage, looking down on the crowd. |
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A chorus of high-pitched wolf howls pierces the stillness of a frigid January morning. |
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Unseen insects chirped and swarmed through the sunwarmed grasses and undergrowth, the razzing of cicadas a continuous chorus in the summer air. |
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Don't tell me the odd player didn't take advantage afterwards of an impressionable chorus girl. |
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She began her career as a chorus girl in an African-American revue in Philadelphia and also appeared at the Cotton Club in Harlem. |
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It follows the romance between a movie star and the chorus girl recruited to replace his inept leading lady. |
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To prove that he can teach anyone to be good enough to replace her, he picks a chorus girl to be his next partner. |
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Starting as a nightclub chorus girl, she advanced to supporting roles in New York plays, and then became famous as a blonde Hollywood sexpot. |
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As soon as I was in high school, I could sing in a special chorus in addition to having my daily choral class. |
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We were both immobilized, despite being severely drenched, by our chorus of hysterical laughter. |
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From outdoor light sculptures to all-puppet chorus lines, this season is, without a doubt, chock-full of weird and wonderful artistic delights. |
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Many drivers reacted angrily to the protesters and responded with a chorus of honks and shouts. |
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Burnside's guitar and vocals have been sampled and mixed with a beat, some overdubs and a verse and chorus from Kid Rock. |
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One remembers how audibly and visibly subfusc was the almost apologetic chorus in their otherwise excellent opera, Don Carlo. |
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Before she was a fabulous comedy chameleon, Tracey Ullman was a teen dancer touring with a gaggle of chorus boys. |
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Mad strobe lighting during the chorus was a fun dramatic flourish but I wish they'd put a bit more death metal in the guitars. |
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On Painkiller, Griffin's soft falsetto floats above a catchy chorus and sweet pop melody. |
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She can write an expansive melody that's well structured but isn't straitjacketed by chorus and verse. |
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The song lays out a physical funk beat, interlaying a richly harmonized chorus with Pharrell Williams' saucy rap. |
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The hierarchy of lead singer over chorus in Beatles music is harmoniously achieved. |
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She's in an evening gown in front of a chorus line of stenos, who have letters on their smock-like dresses and carry steno pads and pencils. |
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In Greek drama and in the works of Pindar, odes were sung by a chorus and performed with dance. |
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The chorus trades Nuer lines with Arabic affirmations, something that would have been next to impossible only a year ago. |
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The whole Virginia Minstrels chorus joins in while cakewalking in line behind Emmett. |
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We'll also be looking for an extra chorus and lead roles for the Christmas stage production at Sadler's Wells. |
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The fox alerts a 'building' of rooks in the highest branches of the ash trees, which takes flight in a chorus of raucous cawing. |
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The dawn chorus further stimulates my waking senses as did the roosting of the rooks at the previous dusk, a building of rooks some say. |
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The only thing that places it as an early 80s artifact is the sound of guitars squeezed through chorus pedals. |
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In those days, it always had a bit of chorus pedal on it, which made the bass sound a little thicker. |
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Four individual characters and a chorus add flesh and blood to Sircar's play. |
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In Greek theatre the chorus always marched onto stage in a square, but danced in circular mode. |
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In Greek tragedy the chorus commented on the action, but in Feathers of Peace there is no commentator giving moral comment. |
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Bank of England governor Sir Eddie George added his voice to the growing chorus of optimism. |
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Dr Rycroft, an expert in classical music, joined the chorus against a statutory limit on the volume of orchestras. |
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Bill saw the tank thundering towards his outfit and heard his own voice join a chorus of warning cries as its guns began firing. |
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The moderator of the Church of Scotland has added his voice to the chorus of concern. |
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If you love your freedom and your rights, you will add your voice to the growing chorus of opposition. |
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We beeline to Church Street and do the same thing, blowing through red lights and garnering a chorus of catcalls from the local street life. |
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German international Lothar Matthaus added his voice to the chorus of approval. |
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Young people are adding their voice to the chorus of anger over plans to axe Swindon post offices. |
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This morning, the President added his voice to the chorus of caution against New Orleans moving too fast. |
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But the chorus of whines about interference in the internal affairs of the country is 90 per cent arrant hypocrisy. |
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Some Labour backbenchers have added their voices to the chorus of condemnation. |
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The most masterfully executed, Reflex Action also has the largest cast and includes, among other things, a musical number and a chorus line. |
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Then the kids all have to vote on whether a girl who hits a boy who talks trash to her can still be in the chorus of the spring musical. |
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She was unique in her day because most female dancers danced in the chorus and there were very few female solo performers. |
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It was a truly great performance from the former student who once filled the ranks of the chorus in a musical put on in the local school. |
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When both the chorus and the dancers are on the steps they cannot be told apart. |
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Those on stage were excellent, from Carney and Brennan in the lead roles, to the chorus line of servants in the upper-crust Lord household. |
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They were hatcheck and cigarette girls, dancers in chorus lines, singers with small bands and combos, and glamorous frequenters of night spots. |
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Simon is now several years and several pantos down the road from his 1984 debut as a chorus dancer. |
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Hollywood today mourned the death of actress Joan Crawford, the chorus dancer who became a glamour queen. |
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Rossini expert Scimone makes a good case for the score, and the chorus and orchestra add to the professionalism. |
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The chorus and distant orchestra are also very much up to Frandsen's fast tempi, very difficult in a live performance of such a demanding work. |
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From 1786, they presented an oratorio each year, either at Lent or Christmas, for which the chorus and orchestra of the court were engaged. |
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The chorus and orchestra respond well to Gergiev's baton, as usual, and Philips' sound is the best in the series so far. |
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The chorus and orchestra of La Chapelle Royale directed by Philippe Herreweghe reveal the intrinsic delight of dedicated performers. |
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As well as the music, the barbershop chorus will also hold a raffle in The Strand to raise funds for equipment and uniforms for the coming year. |
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Back in Prague for a couple of days, we heard the male chorus in Smetana's opera The Bartered Bride sing its praises. |
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He reportedly disliked the Turin chorus and orchestra, and so it was supplemented by singers and musicians from La Scala. |
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So Simple's chorus features a vocal divertingly speeded up to a cartoon squeak. |
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Danielpour demands much from his chorus in this piece, asking them to convey a range of passions associated with human suffering. |
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Under Mackerras's direction, singers, the huge chorus and orchestra played this in convincing, passionate fashion. |
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Last year I saw this rather elaborate piece that had a chorus in addition to a full orchestra. |
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They are the ones who find it difficult to stand through chorus after chorus. |
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The chorus 'I love to worship you' was composed by Paul Cowderoy and performed by the worship team of the Centre. |
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And when the patron informed me that yes, he did have a room for tonight, the chorus from Handel's Messiah erupted in my head. |
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Further out, up to her waist, an elderly matron in a voluminous one-piece holds a walkman in upraised arms and belts out the chorus to an opera. |
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It's interesting too, that people remember the chorus rather than the verses of popular songs. |
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It's a powerful song, whose repeat chorus has done more against police brutality than a quorum of ombudsmen could have achieved. |
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Anne wasn't familiar with the song, but by the third time the chorus was repeated, she was able to join in. |
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I could sing the first verse and the chorus of the song, I could remember her husband's name. |
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You'll always find a chorus of people to nod agreement to your stupid charge. |
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Three sopranos blend their voices together in eerie beauty, and the male chorus provides a firm underpinning, often through chanting. |
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The dropping of a simplistic synth line in the bridge and eventual chorus only sweetens the deal. |
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The Finale is superb, featuring splendid singing by the chorus and the quartet of soloists. |
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The vocal writing for both soloists and chorus is demanding almost to the point of impracticality. |
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A splendid orchestra and chorus group set up a solemn and glorious atmosphere for the play. |
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As regards choral sound, I am not sure that the developed voices of an operatic chorus are ideal in terms of sound quality. |
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The opening scenes present a bounty of puppies so unbearably cute, they'll elicit a chorus of coos from even the stoniest audience. |
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We have responded to the chorus of denunciation like dogs to a siren, unreflectingly, that is. |
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These pools as well as the deeper water areas of the sedge meadow provide breeding habitat for chorus frogs, spring peepers, and smallmouth. |
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One moment the music will put you in chill-out mode, the next moment you're ready to shake your booty in a chorus of sweaty bodies. |
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From the start, his speech was accompanied by a chorus of whistling and booing. |
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The chorus tells us that the snotty girl tells the boy to sling his hook, because he isn't good enough for her. |
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She rises and descends with natural ease and skips through a complicated chorus full of rich imagery. |
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It was performed by an orchestra accompanied by four solo singers and a chorus of 50 singers. |
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As I write this, forty years later, I've signed up to sing that very chorus with my local symphony this year. |
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And those closing strains die away, and the finale begins, a faint chorus of distant voices singing in unison, the orchestra silent. |
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The dawn chorus starts shortly before 4 a.m. now, and I find it impossible to sleep on once the noisy little blighters have roused me. |
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We camped overnight but with the dawn chorus and the sheep bleating, it was hard to sleep! |
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Flies buzzed, cockerels crowed, goats bleated and a chorus of dogs was howling furiously. |
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However, around the turn of the 15th century, the practice began of having a small chorus sing polyphonically. |
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It is a spangly piece of tuneful easy listening, a record unashamed of a simple chorus and a driving rhythm. |
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The chorus unveils gleaming shards of bombastic wit and cut-throat tuneage before the shroud of unfriendly uber-noise descends once more. |
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Imagine a subtle chorus of voices, the ever present sibilating that accompanies any large crowd. |
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It is expected the chorus will include the blackcap, willow warbler and chiffchaff and others. |
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It was great for a really noisy pub singalong of the chorus after 9 pints of black and tan. |
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Later, the chorus was taken up by elephants trumpeting as they came down to drink. |
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The delegation today is little more than a shrill chorus of the administration's critics. |
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As more and more woke up, a rising chorus of shrieks for help shook hoarfrost from the vaulted stones, and eventually called help. |
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Since the 1970s the woods have been losing their spring chorus of birdsong. |
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In spring, birds nested in the eaves, the twitterings, cheepings and chorus of birdsong wrecking the soundtrack. |
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I remember everyone drunkenly singing along to the chorus as the grizzly old bar manager brought up a half empty keg for us to polish off. |
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The treble chorus of bonjours came from the friendly farmer's friendly wife and his two teenage daughters, all of them creasing themselves. |
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That was the first line of the first chorus of the first song of my first hit album when I miraculously became a pop diva. |
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But the girl had slipped into the woods, into the midst of a chorus of singing tree frogs and cicadas. |
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This community consists of a chorus of different and sometimes dissonant voices, all funded centrally to foster diversity. |
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You can sing each chorus before it arrives, and hear each middle eight before you can reach for the fast forward button. |
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Why did the male chorus have huge electric torches that they shone out over the audience? |
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The chorus is youthful and mettlesome, impressively precise yet never mechanical. |
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It's probably their most recognisable track and contains a guilty pleasure thanks to its chant-along chorus and welcome sense of familiarity. |
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My only reply was a chorus of laughter from the tour guide and my fellow tourists. |
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What about tigers, elephants and ducks listening to a chorus of frogs singing happily? |
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The dawn chorus is a medley of warblers and shrikes, and, always from the same tree, the klu-klu-klu of a green woodpecker. |
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It was joined in chorus by the thunder of the warships' guns pounding the redoubts and the peals of church bells tolling eight o'clock. |
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The chorus were similarly all in black, with little to differentiate the individual characters that make up the drama. |
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Phyllis O Keefe played the bridal chorus and wedding march for the bride and groom. |
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In Lunarium, a chorus of flowers with milky white veins and carmine edges opens to receive the light of the radiant full moon high above. |
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The chorus of sailors and passengers radiates sunny bonhomie, singing and dancing crisply. |
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The chorus was tripled in size and extra musicians were added to the orchestra. |
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The COC Orchestra did full justice to the many beauties of the score and the chorus sounded robust. |
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In the distance now they could hear the sounds of many more men shouting, a ragged chorus that rose over the clatter of steel against steel. |
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The ladies' chorus had tears streaming down their faces and Julie, the inadvertent stripper, was slowly dying of embarrassment. |
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It starts out slow and ethereal, but when the chorus comes, it effloresces into a symphony of preternatural sound that blows you away. |
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From the chorus to the rappers students gave their all, bringing weeks of hard work to fruition. |
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Around her whirled a kaleidoscope of unfamiliar faces, a jumbled chorus of voices sounding in ten different languages. |
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An chorus of affirmatives rang into his earpiece, and he nodded in satisfaction. |
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Some of the dancers in the chorus do have the appropriate raunchiness, and all are technically up to the task. |
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A loud chorus of boos rained down on Guinn in rounds 8,9 and 10 for his inability send Banks to the showers early. |
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In rows of kennels, dogs awaiting adoption wag their tails furiously, bark in a deafening chorus and whine desperately for attention. |
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This British musical certainly holds its own against Hollywood rivals of the same era, although the chorus lines tend to be slightly wobbly. |
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A chorus of fairies wafts above the stage, fluttering their diaphanous wings. |
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Jackson repeated the chorus twice more before they all put down their instruments and left me with my wind knocked out. |
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The entire cast joined in the grand finale, with the chorus line dancing as back-up for the featured acts. |
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The second half of the chorus is an admission of defeat, which the music mirrors in a familiar descending chord pattern. |
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Suddenly and for no apparent reason all these wigeon took wing accompanied by a wild chorus and a mighty roar of wings. |
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For wildlife sound recordist Chris Watson, listening to the dawn chorus is like eavesdropping on a secret world. |
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Principals may take the limelight in a musical but chorus work is the lifeblood of it. |
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Some pairs of kingfishers call in duets, and cooperative groups of kookaburras call in a chorus at dawn and dusk. |
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As he keeps insisting, there is still some way to go before his Spurs side can consider themselves worth a fresh chorus of hallelujahs. |
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Rehearsals are well underway at the moment with chorus and principals rehearsing in Kilmacowen Drama Centre and Ransboro school. |
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The two-man chorus is lent an alliterative, Anglo-Saxon form reminiscent of Heaney's Beowulf. |
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Morning came early, as it tended to in the early days of spring, causing Armande to wake with the dawn chorus of birds. |
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It was barely light yet and not even the dawn chorus interrupted the mournful silence she had ordered upon the palace. |
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Debbie Harry sang the final verse and chorus in French, and a million teenage boys melted. |
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He leads with an incisive baton and the orchestra and chorus respond with spirit. |
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A poet who didn't wake for a dawn chorus like the ones you get here would be a sad fellow indeed. |
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In terms of musicals, he has been there for nigh on 20 years, colonising foreign cities with his chorus lines. |
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The sonic trickery can get a little wearing, but there's always a heart-melting tune or a catchy chorus to provide an emotional anchor. |
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The group repeats a chorus or claps while a lead singer or drummer sets the pace. |
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The tea-towel-wearing shepherd totters on stage, blurts his lines and joins an angelic chorus in singing Little Donkey. |
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I couldn't have felt more ecstatic if the heavens had opened up and serenaded me with a chorus of angelic voices. |
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With a chorus of screams, the horses all plunged into crazed fear, throwing riders to and fro. |
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The dawn chorus roused me very early again today, dragging me from snug warm covers to the desk after a slight detour to get coffee. |
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But, make no mistake, the chorus of complaint is not limited to the left wing of the Democratic Party. |
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A chorus line of dancing divas and knights, flatulent Frenchmen, killer rabbits and one legless knight are featured. |
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The dawn chorus starts at about half four and I've barely slept and now I have hundreds of birds singing loudly. |
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We studied female and male behavior during the dawn chorus in two different nest box populations around Antwerp, Belgium. |
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The late 1990s saw the introduction of cheap hard disk and minidisk multi-track recorders, many with effects such as reverb and chorus built in. |
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I particularly noted the basses of the chorus as they sinisterly intoned the conspirators music. |
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North Wiltshire MP James Gray has added his voice to the growing chorus of dismay over plans to build a tunnel under the M4 from Swindon to Wootton Bassett. |
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The President's policies have been questioned by a growing chorus of critics. |
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A rackety chorus of crickets and frogs forms the nightly soundtrack to bermudian life. |
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When Xayalith asks the crowd to sing the chorus to the next chune, nobody needs any cajoling. |
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It's his knowing way around a walloping chorus and his welcome sense of restraint and economy that allow said hooks to live for many hum-worthy listens. |
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A band, in slow, last chorus finality, warms the crowd up nicely. |
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And then that chorus kicks in, and the young lady formerly known as Lizzy Grant transforms into the princess of darkness. |
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Since the arrival of chorus Master Donald Palumbo, the Met chorus now commands that same level of excellence as the orchestra. |
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The chorus is particularly annoying in its one-dimensional repetitiveness, and the whole kaboodle runs out of ideas about a minute before the end. |
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My hyperventilating and Angela's hyperventilating could have combined and we'd have a beautiful chorus of wheezy breaths and flared nostrils and rolling eyes. |
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The chorus is a real grower, complete with excellent guitar flourishes. |
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Before making its last performance in Taipei, the university's orchestra and chorus had toured in Taichung and Pingtung, receiving passionate audience responses. |
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Horatio, who wants a happier ending for Hamlet than silence, chimes in with a denial of it which gives way to a chorus of singing angels winging Hamlet to heaven. |
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The congregation fell silent, then erupted into a chorus of hallelujahs. |
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And there is no chorus of dogs, locked in yards alone, whose barks and yaps and howls, at most other times of the year, bounce from ridge to ridge, amplified by winds. |
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Ruby also danced in a chorus of a Hollywood club for a while, as her marriage deteriorated and finally ended in divorce. |
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A chorus of yeses, head nods, and wolf calls went around the table. |
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But the rain stopped as suddenly as it had begun, and the sun was already steaming the water buffalo dry as a ragged chorus wafted back from the restaurant car. |
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Slick stage management in the hands of Dave Bedding ensured the show moved at a pace and strong chorus work and pit singers meant each number was given the full treatment. |
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His vocals on the verse are some of his most affecting and emotional yet, while the anthemic chorus provides a break of desperate hope amid the quiet despondency. |
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The lights were bright, the chorus and orchestra deafening, the adrenaline pumping, the action frantic and then, as quick as a flash, it was all over. |
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The entire cast joined in a lavish, choreographed opening number and the grand finale, with the chorus line dancing as back-up for the featured acts. |
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Before we begin, let's all join in a rousing chorus of our anthem. |
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The chorus of the surrounding forest assaulted my battered brain. |
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Behind a chorus of shrill insects, the pops of gunfire can sometimes be heard in the distance. |
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Unmoved by a chorus of anguished cries, the Biltmore crew calmly rounded up the glasses, tallied the tabs and shrugged off entreaties for special dispensation. |
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The collective response from the hallelujah chorus of legal dermatologists? |
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Before a chorus could sing the Magnificat, Bach had to write it. |
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After a chorus of ayes, I began walking towards the stables. |
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It follows the lives of the identical twin chorus girls Dora and Nora Chance. |
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He joins a chorus of leading figures and academics from the world of Scots art and culture who are concerned about the plight of Burns' birthplace. |
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Replaying it, slight flattening of pitch occurs during the Offertoire following the baritone solo, where chorus high notes have minimum instrumental support lower down. |
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There is a throb of constant excitement, an irrepressible energy as palpable as the tangled screech of a bird chorus in the wash, glow and lightness before sunrise. |
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Although Glenn said it was pretty demanding, it really showed off the strength of his voice as he bellowed out the chorus with the other boys in the background. |
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He held his arms out to the crowd as he bellowed the chorus and danced. |
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At Copley, he also exhibited a continuous 80 slide projection, coupled with an audiotape, showing a nine-person chorus singing sea chanteys with a pianist accompanying them. |
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It is conspicuously silly in places, with a chorus of Belfast millies incongruously inserted into the midst of the classical melodramatic and stylised family angst. |
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He raised the pole above his head, drove the spike into a log at his feet, shinnied up the pole, and to a chorus of cheers, bowed as he stood upon the far side, triumphant. |
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Emphasise it today and a chorus of respectable voices will shout you down. |
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Every big chorus kicks off with a raucous singalong or choir-like swells, and hearing everybody in the studio bellow together may be the best part of the album. |
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The logic of the chorus has both eyes blacked each time, and it is no surprise that verse three finds the young man recommending non-engagement, or at least discretion. |
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Soon he branches out on his own and progresses quickly from chorus singer to a featured act while appearing in blackface with one of the country's popular minstrel shows. |
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The lands beyond are filled with a chorus of bleats and croaks and barks. |
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A growing chorus of religious scholars is objecting to their declaration of a caliphate straddling Iraq and Syria. |
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Once again an unenthused chorus prevented it from seeming alive. |
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Its cry was musical, not sounding like one wolf, but a chorus of many. |
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During a home game against Dunfermline the player's misfiring performance was subjected to a sustained chorus of boos and jeers from his own fans. |
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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. |
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Nudity and ribaldry have been a staple of Las Vegas entertainment since Siegel's day, the bosomy chorus girls parading behind the comics and crooners. |
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It rattles along at a fair lick and Colin Newton's drums sound like a bottle bank being blown up, but the next morning it is the infectious chorus that I can't stop humming. |
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Typically, viewers gain this knowledge through one character's asides or soliloquies of which other characters are unaware or through the use of a chorus commenting on events. |
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Oh, and there's a huge, meat-grinder chorus between the minstrel verses. |
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The song's arrangement is nearly perfect with Branch slowly building the first verse into a bombastic chorus in which she asks the song's title repeatedly. |
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Martin and Jack played for almost two hours, and then they started repeating the chorus of the last song, except with free-styled lyrics, over and over and over again. |
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The orchestra, soloists and chorus certainly earned those cheers. |
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The chorus negotiated Britten's difficult choral lines with conviction and the orchestra rose to the challenge of interpreting Britten's demanding score. |
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Bright, colourful and entertaining with an excellent cast, chorus and dancers and the Sunbeams are, as always delightful and almost steal the show. |
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Now, with special guests, chorus and dancers, he is once again taking centre stage in his own professional show which features many of the classics from the West End musicals. |
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American novelists have done their bit to swell the chorus of lamentation. |
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Failing to achieve this task in rhythm to the music releases a chorus of boos and jeers, and if it continues for too long, ends your game immediately. |
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Experts on each of the topics covered add their voices to the rising chorus of resistance to commodification, deregulation and global corporatization. |
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On Monday, the company added its voice to the growing chorus of dissent. |
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The chorus of wails prepared me for the arduous battles which lay ahead. |
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I wish to add my voice to the growing chorus of protest at the damage our Prime Minister is causing to the country's image as a tolerant, egalitarian and fair society. |
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Lead singer enjoyed using her chorus pedal while the lead guitarist couldn't stop creating textures and backward-sounding leads with his volume pedal. |
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Donald Maxwell is a seasoned operatic buffo, who nicely cherishes, relishes and polishes his pontificating arias, with chorus usually dancing attendance. |
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Brooks had focused on one line from the chorus and felt the song would be stronger with the song centered on the lonely man spinning the records late at night. |
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It has a catchy chorus that you can easily sing along to and he has a voice that not many male singers have right now, so he stands out from the other male singers of today. |
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As he beds a procession of desperate chorus girls and barmaids, his long-suffering wife, Phoebe, drinks herself into oblivion in their ramshackle bedsit. |
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There's quite a chorus of noises because we've got ostriches and deer as well here, so there's quite a crescendo of different noises of an evening. |
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Through the Spanish language we know God and hear God in the still small voice and in the coritos, the little chorus songs that are popular in our worship. |
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It comes most vividly to life when the chorus is aroused as, for example, when the ladies are stirred to anger by the antics of the strutting Lieutenant Zuniga. |
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The opening song sets the perfect tone for the whole album, combining sheer heaviness and technicality with a towering chorus that utilizes the full range of her voice. |
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It was like a cattle call for the chorus line of a bad Broadway play. |
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The verses are doused in glockenspiel and well-blended synth and recorder, while the chorus positively soars on electric piano ostinatos and fluid bass. |
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Easy guitar strumming, a touch of piano, pleasant harmonies and a memorable soaring falsetto in the chorus are all that are needed to make this a dead cert for qualification. |
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With seven tracks clocking in at over an hour, expect some nice, long, drawn-out sound sketches, each slowly building to a sweeping chorus of digital clicks and stutters. |
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The plan has set off a chorus of disapproval from conservationists outraged at the possibility of surrounding the historic site with malls and fast-food outlets. |
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As the waters subside, there has been a growing chorus of voices among environmental activists that the flooding in Europe and Asia could be linked to global climate change. |
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His chorus blends the most modern harmonies with old-fashioned swing. |
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Born in 1939 to a chorus girl and a music-hall comedian, he learned his craft making TV commercials in the mid-60s before seeing a window of opportunity. |
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Frank Sinatra is in fine form in this musical about a roguish nightclub owner who gets involved in a love triangle with a society hostess and a chorus girl. |
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She comes to Paris as a chorus girl at a Follies club, eager to escape the emotional restraint of English life and to possibly find a berth on a ship going west. |
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Born to a starving English artist and a French chorus girl, Becky is orphaned and learns to rely on wits and feminine guile, sharpened at Miss Pinkerton's academy. |
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His interpretation is desiccating, and in the third movement, the women's chorus performs the parlando sections coarsely, as if they were selling fish. |
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They are forgettable not because they are boring, but because the chorus always hits with such a wave of hummable, nostalgic melody that it overpowers them, every time. |
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Actually, the Italian Prime Minister deserves a double chorus of hurrahs! |
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And especially not to listen to the chorus of middle class pressure groups and supplicants who clamour for their own priorities to be espoused unexamined. |
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A chorus of clucks answered the maiden when the door was opened. |
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A cryptic chorus of sound accompanies these series of visions while a swirling and undulating hot air balloon figure slowly inflates under the night sky. |
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A chorus of applause and cheers greeted this, so loud for so few that I looked around in confusion, wondering where they had hidden all the extra people. |
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The chorus of complaints about the FSA is growing in volume and intensity. |
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The number of males displaying in a lek or chorus each day is often positively correlated with the number of females visiting or mating in the aggregation. |
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It's funny, having known the chorus and the intermezzo well for years, I realised I only properly listened to the whole opera in order to write this blog entry. |
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Salicional, viole, and octave coupler produce a satisfactory string chorus which is yet not so vivid as to be inconsistent with the genius of the Willis organ. |
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The chorus shimmies, writhes, whirls, frugs, and electric-slides from one end of the stage to the other in the campy choreography of debauched hippies. |
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