Mr Ewing said people in the community had already organised a large number of fundraising events including quiz nights, a pantomime and concerts. |
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Exchanging messages across a crowded room or at open-air concerts will never be the same. |
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As well as the flowers, visitors can also enjoy guided walks, evening concerts, plays and themed festivals. |
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He jets to Bruce Springsteen concerts, has several luxury cars and collects fossils in prehistoric amber. |
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The Cathedral is a beautiful venue for concerts and recitals and all musicians who play there comment on the wonderful acoustic of the building. |
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During my concerts in the United States the audience wanted me to sing in Bhojpuri. |
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Pop concerts present very different safety and public order issues to football. |
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His concerts are a mixture of improvisation, passion and emotion with a candid sense of humour. |
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The council chamber would be multi-purpose, perhaps able to convert into a small auditorium for concerts and lectures. |
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When I lived in Rotterdam, I wasn't triggered to start a label or organize concerts. |
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They used to take me up to Auckland for Philharmonia concerts and film festivals. |
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As part of the troupe, she toured Europe and performed in several major concerts. |
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Many of them, in fact, are in demand to perform at concerts here and abroad and earn good moolah from each show. |
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Most other events, big concerts, mini-concerts, and workshops, were well under cover. |
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The concerts will take place simultaneously at five venues around the world. |
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As we grow older, we all become nostalgic for the past and Mrs Manning spoke of schooldays, family sing-songs, church concerts and so on. |
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In addition to doing school studies, the students can take part in dances, film shows, concerts, sing-songs, debates and quizzes. |
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Bring balloons, blow them up, start throwing them around like they do before concerts start. |
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As the sun sank below the horizon, the festivities ended with concerts, mostly of the dangdut variety. |
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In 1989, he gave 63 solo concerts nationwide, a record that is still unbroken. |
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In 1972 a small two rank Chamber Organ was purchased for use in concerts and services. |
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The concerts all but sell out through applications from the official fan club before the public even gets a look in. |
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The ban also prevents stadium owners from selling drink at other events such as concerts. |
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As with the Jazz Fest, there's both pricey indoor shows and free outdoor concerts. |
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There cannot have been many, if any, concerts in York that were entirely devoted to music by women composers. |
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And I hadn't known any other life, other than, you know, hotel rooms and concerts and records and studios and press conferences. |
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The musically inclined can look forward to an array of Carnatic music concerts, flute recital and a grand violin concert. |
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Shashank appreciated the all-night Carnatic music concerts being held in Bangalore since last year. |
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The atrium hosts a variety of events from art shows and children's concerts to health fairs and screenings. |
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The regulations were further eased in the late 1990s to allow pop concerts and the screening of Japanese films. |
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He has held pop concerts across China in the shortest period after stepping into stardom. |
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If you are very lucky, you may even be able to get hold of some tickets for one of the concerts or other live performances staged here. |
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The basement is where the celebrity pianists go to pick out a Steinway for their recording sessions, concerts, TV shows. |
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Mr Kuerti told us though that the treasure of the event was a string quartet in one of the concerts we missed. |
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Born in Watford, Herts, Fletcher started writing odes as a pupil at Friern Barnet Grammar, where he produced concerts. |
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The works of 20 composers will be stretched over eight concerts in a four-day festival. |
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With the exception of contemporary music, orchestral concerts tend to be a safer bet to sell than theatre or opera. |
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They attended the opera, concerts, and took part in a chamber music competition. |
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She is an experienced orchestral player and has given several concerts with the Lim chamber music trio. |
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For example, the old church seemed to frown upon the system of concerts of live music as a way of praying. |
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Also, while all indoor concerts and performance events are cancelled, outdoor activities are still held. |
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He stated once that Castle Howard was probably the first venue to stage outdoor concerts, apart from opera honeypot Glyndebourne, in Sussex. |
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People can go to concerts, music performances and drumming workshops or a silent art auction. |
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The discretionary fund is used to pay musicians, broadcast live classical music concerts and operas. |
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The program included concerts of classical and Byzantine music, meetings of Byzantine choirs inside the church and a hagiological convention. |
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Christmas is a few days away and it is time for choirs and concerts when you are not baking cakes and decorating your Christmas tree. |
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To this end a series of evening classes and weekend workshops is planned to complement the concerts and events being staged. |
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All sorts of music will be well represented at the festival, including concerts of Irish folk music, jazz, Parisian chansons and brass bands. |
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The Jazz in the Foyer concerts are new monthly musical events being staged in the Foyer Bar. |
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The event is free from noon until 7pm but people need tickets for the evening concerts. |
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He gives concerts every Friday evening in the vineyard jazz club and I have yet to get out there to witness this prodigy. |
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The Navarthri Mandapam has the distinction of staging Carnatic music concerts in a unique manner. |
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So who else is sick of the coughers and splutterers and sweet wrapper rustlers who spoil concerts? |
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Evesham and District Music Club welcomes new members but the concerts are open to non-members. |
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The concerts will also include traditional pieces, spirituals, Christmas songs and carols. |
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Before disbanding, the decision was made to play a handful of farewell concerts. |
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What follows, indulgent I'll admit, is a list of the 10 greatest concerts I've ever seen. |
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The festival has been going since then, and every summer it presents operas, plays and concerts of the finest. |
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His concerts remained vibrant, pulsating showstoppers, rock as it was meant to be. |
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Involve grandparents in your child's life, such as inviting them to school concerts and open days or birthday parties. |
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It is said that the world's greatest pianists attended Horowitz concerts to witness his legendary feats at the keyboard. |
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Cities and town celebrate the patron saint's feast day, usually with carnivals, processions, masses, dances, and concerts. |
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The hall is also an ideal venue for meetings, concerts and other social and cultural gatherings. |
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For a start, an incredible two million people have apparently applied for tickets to the Jubilee concerts. |
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The Philharmonia Orchestra has been brought in to underpin the major concerts. |
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The concerts have featured internationally renowned bands playing music as diverse as African dance music, ska, jive, salsa and Bhangra. |
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Against the backdrop of Lewis Castle, a whirligig of ceilidhs, concerts and workshops takes place. |
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They joined forces with the Kurume Shinai High School to perform several concerts. |
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The poetry readings, lunchtime concerts, museum exhibits and jam sessions add to this week of swing in the spring. |
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The scholarship provides free entry to all lectures, poetry readings, exhibitions and concerts during the week of the Summer School. |
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She is a well-known accompanist who regularly appears in concerts with soloists and ensembles. |
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Accompanying this was a sound and light show that would match any of the big pop concerts as well as a fantastic house band. |
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The programme includes exhibitions, concerts, films and visiting guests, round tables, workshops, contests and many other events. |
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A Queensbury brass band's Christmas concerts could be threatened if they cannot find a replacement for their former leader. |
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Even with extra seats placed in the aisles, occupancy was far more than 100 per cent at both the concerts we attended. |
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This is the person who will buy tickets to attend symphony concerts, opera, ballet, chamber music recitals, choral concerts and musical theater. |
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Mama, convinced she had produced a wunderkind, arranged for Cole to play piano and violin concerts in and around Peru. |
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Although they have used dancers on occasion in their concerts, regrettably, they will not be doing so here. |
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I was a bin man at the time and I also used to go to concerts at Wallington Public Hall. |
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In 2005 an average of three concerts per month were held in the cathedral providing mainly classical and traditional Irish music. |
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The combination of top quality performance and the ambience of the concerts has produced evenings of great enjoyment both musically and socially. |
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For five weeks they explore the riches of the chamber music repertoire and present more than 30 public concerts. |
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The nobility, sublimity, depth, pathos and exuberance of his concerts remain esoteric and reveal his scholarship, authority and authenticity. |
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Its Roman amphitheatre seats 5,000 for concerts and the annual film festival. |
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I simply wanted to point out my lack of experience, i.e. zilch and zero, of attending major rock concerts. |
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The Coleman festival which took place from September 2th to 4th was a resounding success with packed audiences each night at the concerts. |
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He spent the next dozen years making records and playing concerts in an alcoholic haze, drinking a bottle of brandy a day. |
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The child-free couple who lives on one side of us regularly throws house concerts that run late. |
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These days Meredith gives concerts throughout the United Kingdom and works as a life coach. |
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There are, accordingly, art exhibits, live concerts, light shows, workshops and dance events celebrating all of the Americas. |
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Seriously, it's like I'm one of those neon light sticks that they sell at nightclubs and concerts that you crack and shake, and then they glow. |
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In 1818 his orchestral compositions began to make occasional appearances at public concerts. |
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During his free time, George likes going to the cinema with his Cypriot friends, and also to concerts. |
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In addition to its internationally-acclaimed circus, there is a sparkling series of big band concerts and tributes headlining. |
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You can also see free movies and concerts at Harbourfront in the summertime. |
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To show their support people are asked to wear a white band, either an armband, wristband or headband, during the concerts. |
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A promotions company at the centre of a financial row following two outdoor concerts has gone into liquidation. |
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It's great for films, festivals, concerts, and of course the opportunity to study at the university. |
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His company's bid was to turn the Dome into an arena for rock concerts and sports including boxing, tennis and athletics. |
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The concerts are free from artificial electric sound systems, microphones and loudspeakers. |
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Customers can also rent video tapes of films and concerts in the Russian language. |
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What we cannot rely on any more is solidly predictable attendance at uninteresting concerts. |
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The campaign will use concerts and media events headlined by socially-conscious celebrities to drive the internet fundraising. |
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His performance, voice, phrasing, sensitivity, alaap, bandishes, as well as total control over sur and taal contribute to his magnetic concerts. |
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Gallo started her career in 1985 at Woya, a highlight of Cameroon's musical calendar, opening her concerts with talking drums and ringing a bell. |
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Last year concerts took place over 10 weekends, acting as a magnet for music lovers from the region itself and much further afield. |
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As part of the program's commitment to a broad range of styles, the children were taught a tap dance to perform at one of the concerts. |
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Thousands of Malaysians were expected at the New Year party where concerts and fireworks were scheduled. |
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The Carnival will include workshops, teach-ins, concerts, conferences, cabarets, street theatre, protests, and direct action. |
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Hundreds of events have been organised including a myriad of workshops, themed walks, concerts, performances and films. |
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When I suggest he could subsidise lower ticket prices by putting on fewer concerts he looks at me as though I am bonkers. |
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The concerts will feature some of the finest pop and classical musicians and performers. |
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Broaden your children's musical tastes by exposing them to different kinds of music through recordings and live concerts. |
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The visit is the final event of the season in the Parish Music series of concerts in country churches. |
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George Benjamin has been given carte blanche to devise nine concerts for one of the world's greatest orchestras. |
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Soon after, she was invited to sing at more concerts in North Dakota and her career mushroomed. |
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His increasing participation in musical concerts and music conferences has been testimony to his growing popularity. |
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Perhaps in days gone by people had more time when they attended concerts, operas, and ballets. |
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Newly-formed Wrose Parish Council want to use the village's recreational ground as a venue for markets, car boot sales and open air concerts. |
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Most of you who have been to concerts will have heard the loud screech caused by that sort of feedback loop. |
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The exhibitions are complemented by concerts and theatrical performances in the state-of-the-art theater. |
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Jessica thought the set looked cool, but she wondered why every single pop act had to theme their concerts. |
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At concerts, upon arriving to the podium he would first bow to the orchestra and then to the audience. |
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The programme itself is very varied with theatrical performances, classical concerts, lectures, workshops, masterclasses and opera. |
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She has made three solo CDs, and gives masterclasses, workshops and lecture recitals as well as solo concerts. |
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Eventually, he became a marketing manager for Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas, where he hobnobbed with celebrities and organized regular concerts. |
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It has since developed a programme which includes a regular schedule of rehearsals, sectional workshops and concerts. |
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It will hold ten thousand people and host concerts, ice skating and sports facilities. |
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This John Snetzler chamber organ has been loaned for the Gilbert Stuart concerts by the National Museum of American History. |
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This year the UN will organize exhibitions, concerts and studies meant to deepen knowledge about the banned practice of slavery. |
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As well as the free exhibit there are lectures, Sunday concerts and weekly film screenings at the bastion of German cinema, the Goethe-Institut. |
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During her concerts she tries to mix and match the geets, bhajans, aalaaps and thumris to appeal to a wide audience. |
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The centre is funded largely by donations from abroad, many the result of bazaars, concerts and other fundraising activities. |
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The USMA Band and its ensembles can keep your toes tapping with a full slate of free public concerts and recitals throughout the year. |
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He was an active member of the Philharmonic Society, for which he conducted concerts. |
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The government has blocked off a major highway for street markets, concerts and plays. |
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Drums have been beating throughout the borough's schools this term at a series of musical workshops and concerts. |
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Come up with a great series of concerts and the world will beat a path to your door. |
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He was a tireless campaigner and performer at benefit concerts over many decades. |
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It commences from 15th of May and bedazzles the visitors with excellent dance performances, concerts, and other performances. |
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It makes me melancholy sometimes to think of such things, and my friends try to cheer me up with impromptu concerts and serenades at my window. |
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Two venues have been earmarked for a series of top-class recitals and concerts. |
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A basic measure, calculated using many concert set lists, is to simply count the number of times a given song is played over all concerts. |
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It's not as if the ready availability of rock music on CD stops people going to rock concerts. |
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Meanwhile, over at the town hall, music fans have a feast of concerts lined up next weekend. |
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We also had some Simon and Garfunkel which we would use to mime to and put on concerts! |
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Go to their concerts today and the sensation is not so much one of shock as mind-numbing tedium. |
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Singing and dancing may bring pleasure to the public, charity concerts may salve guilty consciences and the world is definitely in need of some cheering up. |
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Snow Patrol, Travis, McFly, Ronan Keating and Dannii Minogue are just some of the chart-topping acts whose performances at the live concerts will be broadcast on the night. |
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A key element of the project is a giant 10,000-seat arena capable of staging concerts by top-quality acts such as Robbie Williams and the Rolling Stones. |
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The venue's packed programme of shows and concerts was rearranged, with some acts performing at local nightclubs, the Alhambra Theatre and the Victoria Theatre, Halifax. |
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I never understood the screaming hysteria, swooning, and sobbing that seem conventional behaviour for thronging female audiences at big rock concerts. |
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This graceful and prosperous old city is dominated by the fantastic arena, a well-preserved Roman amphitheatre where audiences of 25,000 attend summer opera concerts. |
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Bulgaria welcomed 2003 with a blend of the modern and the traditional, with revellers jamming open-air concerts and mummers parading to ward off evil spirits. |
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Hot, crowded concerts can be exactly the wrong place to be if you take even a moderate dose of MDMA, according to new research. |
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These include poetry readings, concerts of romantic music, films, street theatre and special masses at St Valentine's church for engaged couples and wedding anniversaries. |
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Other events will include a Victorian picnic cricket match, concerts and poetry readings, horse-drawn carriage rides, guided walks and a rowing club regatta. |
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As a result, the museum decided to improve amenities such as the store and restaurant, and to host events including poetry readings, recitals, and concerts. |
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However, most of the concerts are performed in languages other than Tamil. |
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Adverts for outdoor pop concerts are plastered across billboards. |
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Some of them have been going to concerts for fifty or sixty years. |
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Vienna Town Hall is a splendid neo-Gothic affair with a large internal courtyard that is sometimes used for public events like concerts, theatrical performances and balls. |
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The oldest jazz club in the world is Village Vanguard cellar jazz club, opened in New York City, USA, in 1935, and host to mainstream jazz concerts ever since. |
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The wrap-up was masterminded by Kim Gavin, the man who produces live concerts for the pop group Take That. |
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These days, pop-up concerts at unusual venues like Kensington are in good company. |
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Some nights they have concerts for musicians without a permit, and they also arrange shows for painters and photographers. |
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Naturally, all of the tie-dye shirts that I have bought at concerts or made myself over the past few years have faded to a white-pinkish mess after the first wash or two. |
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It is also considered disruptive to clap individual songs or short instrumental pieces rather than at the end of each group at lieder recitals or early music concerts. |
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The mix of cooking segments, pop concerts, and celebrity interviews is met with an unappreciative murmur. |
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The venue for the night concerts was a huge field with naturally sloping sides, and the stages were set against backdrops of tall rainforest trees. |
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They developed a unique style of close harmony with a distinctive sound and soon became very popular on the radio and in concerts in Southern California. |
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Occasional services are held there, as are occasional concerts. |
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But those who condemn the Stockholm-born spinner for the drug-culture at his concerts should take a look at the facts. |
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It sounds good and if it does result in more properly-managed concerts, fairs, festivals and community events being staged in the city's parks it has to be good news. |
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Wanamaker's was known for its stained-glass windows, elaborate store displays, and spectacles including organ concerts, pageants, and storybook characters in show windows. |
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I gently woke my neighbor and listened myself with a concentration not usual for me when attending chamber concerts with late Classical or early Romantic repertoire. |
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You quickly lose count of the number of concerts played, riots started, lines snorted, girls scored, parties busted, millions made and punches thrown. |
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It is so often the case that choral concerts tend to be rather bitty, a less than carefully thought out selection of items from a choral society's current repertoire. |
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There are performances by the Kirov Ballet, a symposium of 25 Nobel laureates, concerts and the opportunity to visit outstanding museums and galleries. |
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During the period of study, the mariachis performed at the Arizona State Senate, the International Mariachi Festival, and numerous local concerts. |
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Now they play fifteen to twenty concerts a year together, while Misha plays ninety to 100 other engagements as soloist, chamber musician or with symphonies. |
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They see their concerts as a way to empower women, both musically and socially. |
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Believing that music should be free, man, a groundswell of penny-pinching hippies forced the promoter to provide free concerts as a sidebar to the festival. |
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The organiser of the concerts took me outside the hotel one day, it is a huge monolith, and asked me if I noticed anything unusual about the design. |
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Shed promoter Simon Thackray presents these myriad delights in a season of nine concerts and artistic happenings at Brawby and Hovingham, near Malton. |
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Take your pick from carol concerts with seasonal readings, Christmas revues, Dickensian productions of A Christmas Carol and Victorian music hall. |
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It is dedicated to presenting concerts and performances with a meaning. |
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The concerts still feature free-form dancers, light shows and musicians in outlandish costumes marching through the audience while chanting and singing. |
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Summer is the time for music festivals, concerts and other outdoor events. |
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From Bonnaroo and Governors Ball to Warped Tour and lollapalooza, see the hottest concerts of the summer. |
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For full details of the sinfonia society concerts contact the office. |
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The cultural authorities began to allow post-punk bands to get accreditation for legal concerts, though lyrics remained an issue. |
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The castle was not insured against such a catastrophe, but the ensuing concerts helped fund the long reconstruction. |
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The concert series will be accompanied by associated masterclasses, lectures and concerts involving staff from the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and student ensembles. |
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They meet for dinner six times a year, rotating among each other's houses, and between times members often get together for sailing, theater, or concerts. |
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They are adamant that their women-only concerts are not a result of religious rules. |
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Held over five weeks, the school features concerts, courses, masterclasses, workshops, exhibitions and lectures open to people of all ages and abilities. |
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Some publications have claimed that Bulletproof Stockings hold women-only concerts in adherence with kol isha. |
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In 1828 he travelled to Vienna for a series of wildly successful concerts, so launching a considerable European career, taking him to almost all the major centres. |
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Now a multi-platinum artist with two Grammy nominations, his concerts draw thousands from all across the globe. |
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With her vocal range embracing mbaqanga, kwela, township jive and American jazz through ballads to gospel, she will add Afro-international zest to the tribute concerts. |
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Her sell-out concerts are deliberately unstuffy affairs, often played before audiences that would view a night at the opera as a dangerous leap into the cultural unknown. |
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In North America, between 250 to 300 well-organized concerts of Carnatic and Hindustani music are presented each year by over 100 local organizers. |
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Even now his concerts are done only with a tabla and a harmonium. |
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Taylor, a native of Vancouver who is known for her stunning voice in arias and Black spirituals, performs regularly at concerts, recitals, and special functions. |
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Officers encouraged the army to ban alcohol and gambling and to provide band concerts, bowling alleys, billiard tables, and other wholesome activities. |
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A wealth of concerts, lectures and masterclasses can be found here. |
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A school of music at Memorial University schedules a variety of concerts and has a chamber orchestra and jazz band. |
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A precocious musician, he was giving concerts when he was seven. |
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He's giving a series of concerts in London ahead of his international tour. |
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The choral and orchestral concerts at the Antient Concert Rooms were of more than usual interest. |
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It is the home of the band The Bees, which performs at smaller local concerts. |
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In the 19th century, public concerts provided access to classical music to all classes of society. |
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With concerts and plays the intermission often proves a bit of dilemma. |
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Students, staff and visiting artists of York St John University music department regularly perform lunchtime concerts in the University chapel. |
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Some evangelical services resemble concerts with rock and pop music, dancing and use of multimedia. |
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Entertainment included concerts, films, plays and books from local libraries. |
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Leas Cliff Hall is the biggest entertainment and function venue in Folkestone with a large choice of concerts, comedy and theatre. |
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The biennial AV Festival of international electronic art, featuring exhibitions, concerts, conferences and film screenings, is held in March. |
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It had previously been a music venue in the 1960s, hosting concerts by The Beatles and The Who. |
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As well as concerts and other exhibitions, the main events are a series of processions through the city. |
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Derby Chamber Music presents an annual series of chamber music concerts at Derby University's Multifaith Centre. |
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For many years a series of symphony concerts has been presented at the Guildhall by the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. |
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And many schools and colleges organise fairs, festivals, and concerts in which citizens from all levels of society can participate. |
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The performance spaces hosted concerts, exhibits, and public entertainment. |
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The performance was considered a great success and was followed by annual concerts that continued throughout his life. |
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Right from their composition the four anthems have been popular and regularly played in concerts and festivals even during Handel's own lifetime. |
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Also in 1907 Cassirer conducted some concerts in London, at one of which, with Beecham's New Symphony Orchestra, he presented Appalachia. |
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He secured an occasional engagement in symphony concerts, playing in 1897 under the baton of Richard Strauss at the Queen's Hall. |
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The group also increasingly shunned television appearances, citing their preference that their fans hear and see them in live concerts. |
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Some early Led Zeppelin concerts lasted more than four hours, with expanded and improvised live versions of their repertoire. |
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During 1974, Pink Floyd had sketched out three original compositions and had performed them at a series of concerts in Europe. |
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Brian May and Roger Taylor performed together at several award ceremonies and charity concerts, sharing vocals with various guest singers. |
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The performance of air guitar is popular among metal fans both at concerts and listening to records at home. |
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In fact this tradition has been revived in parks and stately homes around the UK at promenade concerts such as the Battle Proms. |
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In the UK, all concerts are broadcast on BBC Radio 3, an increasing number are televised on BBC Four with some also shown on BBC One and BBC Two. |
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In 1996, a related series of eight lunchtime chamber concerts was started, taking place on Mondays during the Proms season. |
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The series also included an additional series of four Saturday matinee concerts at Cadogan Hall. |
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In the 2009 season, which ran from 17 July to 12 September 2009, the total number of concerts reached 100 for the first time. |
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Promming tickets are the same price as for other concerts during the season, but tickets for seats are more expensive. |
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Of course, aristocratic patronage of orchestras continued during the Classical era, but this went on alongside public concerts. |
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In May 1877, Richard Wagner himself conducted the first half of each of the eight concerts which made up the Grand Wagner Festival. |
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Eric Clapton is a regular performer at the Hall, it having played host to his concerts almost annually for over 20 years. |
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Thus encouraged, the committee ventured to arrange for a series of symphony concerts at Queen's Hall. |
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Elgar conducted six concerts, Arthur Nikisch three, and Willem Mengelberg, Fritz Steinbach and Gustave Doret one each. |
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In 1917 the LSO's directors agreed unanimously that they would promote no more concerts until the end of the war. |
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These, and later concerts by the same orchestra in 1928 and 1929, made obvious the poor standards then prevailing in London. |
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The LSO arranged a series of concerts conducted by Wood, with whom the orchestra was completely reconciled. |
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To survive, the LSO played in hundreds of concerts of popular classics under undistinguished conductors. |
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They also wished to be free to accept such engagements individually, absenting themselves from concerts if there were a clash of dates. |
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The song is a staple at Iron Maiden concerts, where the recording is played after the final encore. |
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These facilities make most of their income from pop concerts, but they occasionally stage boxing matches and other sporting events. |
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The stadium also hosts rugby league's Challenge Cup final, the NFL International Series and music concerts. |
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All competitions and concerts planned were to be moved to suitable locations. |
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The Olympics meant that no concerts took place at Wembley in summer 2012, with other big shows taking place elsewhere. |
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Free music concerts have been put on for the town, including bands such as the Ordinary Boys, the Script and Elliott Minor. |
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This version became popular during the bicentennial celebrations, and is often heard at pops concerts. |
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Hogmanay now covers four days of processions, concerts and fireworks, with the street party beginning on Hogmanay. |
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The Usher Hall is Edinburgh's premier venue for classical music, as well as occasional popular music concerts. |
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Other venues which are popular for concerts and sporting events include Motorpoint Arena, St David's Hall and the Millennium Stadium. |
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Custom House Square is one of the city's main outdoor venues for free concerts and street entertainment. |
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The Proms, a season of orchestral classical music concerts held at the Royal Albert Hall, is a major cultural event held annually. |
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President Franklin Roosevelt was a fan of folk music, hosted folk concerts at the White House, and often patronized folk festivals. |
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The BBC SO is a resident orchestra at the Barbican Centre, and gives studio concerts from its base at BBC Maida Vale studios. |
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The BBC SO is also the principal orchestra at The Proms, performing the most concerts of any single orchestra in a given Proms season. |
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In 1924, the Wireless Orchestra, by then comprising 22 players, was contracted for six concerts a week. |
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The BBC attempted to stop its contracted players sending deputies to rehearsals and even to concerts, but was unsuccessful. |
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After the initial concerts Reith was told by his advisers that the orchestra had played better for Boult than anyone else. |
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The BBC SO is the associate orchestra of the Barbican Centre in London, where it gives an annual season of concerts. |
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The orchestra remains the principal orchestra of the Proms, giving about a dozen concerts each season, including the first and last nights. |
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Barbirolli was allotted the first ten weeks of the season, comprising 26 concerts. |
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Beecham and Sargent were allies from the early days of the London Philharmonic to Beecham's final months when they were planning joint concerts. |
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With the release of Horizontal, they also embarked on a Scandinavian tour with concerts in Copenhagen. |
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The Spirits Having Flown tour capitalised on Bee Gees fever that was sweeping the nation, with sold out concerts in 38 cities. |
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In 1994, Daltrey turned 50 and celebrated with two concerts at New York's Carnegie Hall. |
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The Who played concerts in the UK in early 2002 in preparation for a full US tour. |
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In May 2005 Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce, and Ginger Baker reunited as Cream for a series of concerts at the Royal Albert Hall in London. |
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In June 1986, the trio reconvened to play three concerts for the Amnesty International A Conspiracy of Hope Tour. |
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Many concerts showcased elaborate lighting and individualised screens reminiscent of U2's Elevation Tour and Nine Inch Nails' Fragility Tour. |
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LeftRightLeftRightLeft, released on 15 May 2009, was to be given away at the remaining concerts of their Viva la Vida tour. |
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The church is a Greek Orthodox church today, but the building is used also for concerts because of its good acoustics. |
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Childe's other hobbies included walking in the British hillsides, attending classical music concerts, and playing the card game contract bridge. |
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The regiment has its own Pipes and Drums, who were first formed in 1946 and tour widely, performing in competitions, concerts and parades. |
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In solo violin concerts, the violinist is accompanied by percussion instruments, usually the tabla, the mridangam and the ghatam. |
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A later version was to become their signature song and closing song at concerts. |
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The gig was hailed as a success by fans and critics many calling it one of the best concerts Runrig have ever staged. |
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Whether through performances at fundraising concerts or campaigns of her own, she backs up her lyrics of social change and equality with action. |
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There are also concerts in the villages of Borve and Breasclete in Lewis, and Northton in Harris. |
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In the summer, many outdoor concerts are given in Grant Park and Millennium Park. |
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Atlanta attracts many touring Broadway acts, concerts, shows, and exhibitions catering to a variety of interests. |
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It is noted for its productions of opera, orchestral concerts, ballet, musical theatre, drama, circus, ice shows and pantomimes. |
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Children in Wales take part in school concerts or eisteddfodau, with recitation and singing being the main activities. |
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On Sundays people are admitted only for services and concerts and there is no sightseeing. |
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The majority of the orchestra's concerts are recorded for broadcast on BBC Radio 3, BBC Radio Wales and BBC Radio Cymru. |
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However, settings of the mass in Latin are allowed and this has been controversially used to allow concerts featuring international soloists. |
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Singers and dancers from around the world are invited to take part in over 20 competitions followed each evening by concerts on the main stage. |
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In 2011 there were concerts featuring Lulu, Russell Watson, Faryl Smith, Ruthie Henshaw and McFly. |
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It is managed by Cardiff Harbour Authority and is as a venue for small concerts, art exhibitions, conferences, meetings and celebrations. |
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A residential course is normally held in the summer, followed by a short tour comprising four or five concerts. |
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This led to concerts at Cardiff Arms Park, the Royal Albert Hall and opening for Dame Shirley Bassey in Antwerp. |
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