He was joined by elegant Italian lutenist Andrea Damiani in contrapuntal pieces by Vincenzo Galilei. |
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There's a stunning, uncredited sax solo and a quirky contrapuntal bit for the trombones. |
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Being raised in a Lutheran tradition, my vocal writing is largely chorale style homophony contrasting with traditional contrapuntal textures. |
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These seem to be simultaneous streams of attention, like two or three interacting contrapuntal voices in a Bach fugue. |
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Generally, they are more lyrical and less contrapuntal than their German counterparts. |
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One could consider this a contrapuntal jeu d' esprit, with rapid lines of imitation and stretto, but for its character of psychological unease. |
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Parker's setting are starker, more monumental, more dependent on modes, open fifths, and contrapuntal imitation. |
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This symphony is, if anything, contrapuntal, and the first movement a stunning exemplar. |
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One finds this mirrored in the antiphonies between orchestral groups in a huge, highly contrapuntal gigue. |
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The shape of Taormina is a geometry of interlocking and contrapuntal curves and concavities with various centres and focal points. |
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The final movement has some pounding drums with trumpets and some more contrapuntal blending of melodic lines. |
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A lot of composers who aren't intimately familiar with the piano feel that the instrument is intrinsically contrapuntal. |
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The first movement, an aria for soprano and alto soloists, has a gorgeous instrumental ritornello that introduces the contrapuntal solo parts. |
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Bach's contrapuntal mastery finds voice in Brahms's repeated use of fugue and passacaglia forms. |
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When already thirty, he decided on a return to basics, busying himself with contrapuntal puzzles, fugues and harmonization of chorales. |
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The second stanza extends both the interrogatory mode and intensifies the language contrapuntal to the traditional imagery. |
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His music is liberally dissonant within a strongly tonal framework, the asperity resulting from the play of contrapuntal lines rather than from wilful experiment. |
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The rich textures are attained through a contrapuntal treatment of the material. |
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One would expect this in something like the early Passacaglia, a contrapuntal Baroque form in which a set of variations occurs over a repeating bass. |
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The motets, however, represent the zenith of Brahms's contrapuntal art. |
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The chords cycle without changing, though a contrapuntal arpeggio sneaks in and plays against the chords as they fade. |
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Subsequently the music becomes exquisitely contrapuntal, and the highly chromatic nature of the lines makes them marvelously expressive. |
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He successfully merged the tuneful galant approach of the Enlightenment with more learned contrapuntal devices inherited from earlier composers. |
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In startling contrast, the next movement is highly contrapuntal, harmonically radical, pianistically bold, and extremely colourful. |
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On present-day instruments one can individualise each voice and give plasticity to the contrapuntal progress of a fugue. |
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In defining musical structure, too, harmonic and modulatory procedures predominated at the expense of the contrapuntal interplay of motives. |
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Gregorian chant, with its measured pace and contrapuntal simplicity, seems inseparable from reverberant cathedrals and stone walls. |
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This gives the gamba lute-like harmonic and contrapuntal options not available to the cello, which has only four strings. |
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It is happy, contrapuntal and busy, and the end seems to suddenly just fly out the window. |
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Mozart's discovery of the contrapuntal art of Bach and Handel impressed him so deeply that almost all of his later works were affected. |
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This solid contrapuntal foundation played an essential role in the development of Johann Michael Haydn's style of composing music for the church. |
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This unique expression involves an extremely complex type of contrapuntal polyphony based on four voices. |
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It is contrapuntal in style and the main subject is restated in the second part, this time in inversion. |
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He does, in fact, use the fugue theme provided by the king, exhausting all contrapuntal possibilities. |
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Their contrapuntal brilliance and their wide range of affections have no equal in the entire literature of the trio or solo sonata. |
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But more important, we see that what really interested Mozart when studying baroque composers was the fugue, the apex of contrapuntal art. |
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In these sonatas, Bach achieves a contrapuntal density that goes beyond anything previous in the genre. |
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In the Mulliner Book the term is applied in this way, and voluntaries there are seen to be a sort of contrapuntal fantasia or ricercar without any cantus firmus. |
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In Martin's mind, the madrigal was mainly a chamber contrapuntal form, best suited to small homogeneous forces and not necessarily limited to voices. |
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One would think that all those cellos would produce a thick, tubby sound, but Boulez's rhythmic and contrapuntal virtuosity keep the music lively and athletic. |
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His marimba and vibes contribute further percussive accents, and the intricate multiple meters and contrapuntal figures add up to a rhythmic feast for the listener. |
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In this early work, moreover, Crawford still relies on traditional phrasing and contrapuntal imitation, so the listener has that rock to hold on to. |
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This work, with its minor-tonality preference, its contrapuntal texture, and its chromatic inflections and harmonies, reflects the drama and moodiness of Sturm und Drang. |
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I also believe that painting, especially abstraction, requires the casting aside of rational thought in favor of syncretic vision, possessing an architecture not unlike the contrapuntal music Gould favored above all else. |
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The results seem to have been encouraging, for in July 1982 Glenn was recording Wagner's Sigfried Idyll in a slow-paced performance emphasizing the work's contrapuntal structures. |
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Willaert's madrigals show a gradual synthesis of the contrapuntal style of the Franco-Netherlandish school and the growing Italian emphasis on harmonic colour and expressiveness. |
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The finale is exhilarating and breathlessly contrapuntal. |
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Each of these thirty compositions follows various principles of symmetry, and the whole forms not only a glorious contrapuntal compendium, but also a perfect microcosm. |
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Their role here is essentially contrapuntal in the sense that, instead of simply thickening the texture with needless passage-work, they subtly and discreetly participate in its elaboration. |
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The speed increases, and soon there is a kind of music to the discussion, a self-organized, contrapuntal ease that allows movement from one issue to the next with unstudied assurance. |
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Drawing upon the rhythmic-melodic properties of Hungarian and Romanian folk music, Bartók produced a unique type of functionally extended harmony determined largely by the contrapuntal interaction of motives. |
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Retaining three-movement format and avoiding strongly contrasting themes, they maintained contrapuntal interplay in the prevailingly homophonic texture. |
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A slow and lyrical second theme gently unfolds in the equal voices of the violin and cello, but with a contrapuntal texture that first recalls the character of a hymn. |
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Along with the virtuoso pieces, dances, variations, and passacaglias found in the volume, the ricercars show the endurance of the contrapuntal style and are particularly well suited to the organ. |
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When Mendelssohn, in the later symphonies, starts moving away from an omni-present contrapuntal style, it is in Mozart's music that he reaches for inspiration. |
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The player encounters many contrapuntal passages, melodies with accompaniment and rapidly articulated repeated notes, anacruses, gruppetti, grace-notes, florid cantilenas and intricate figuration. |
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The fugue, a composition using the technique of melodic imitation, became highly developed in Bach's hands—e.g., the fugues of the Well-Tempered Clavier and his final compendium of contrapuntal devices, The Art of the Fugue. |
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This light-hearted, alluring concerto is nearly devoid of dissonant effects and contrapuntal complexities, but it boasts a veritable parade of melodic ideas. |
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In this musical preaching Bach contrasts the contrapuntal power of God with the pedantic and simple chordal imagination of the proud of this earth. |
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Conceived of as a single flurry from beginning to end, the last movement takes up the main themes of the first two movements in a torrent of contrapuntal, chromatic and particularly acrobatic writing. |
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A wonderful piece, combining contrastive cantabile and lyrical, contrapuntal, motoric, dramatic and other areas. |
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The most versatile craftsman of the Renaissance was Josquin, whose music displays a continual variety of contrapuntal ingenuities, including melodic imitation. |
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One cannot overstate the importance, the skilfulness, the wealth of thematic and contrapuntal invention, the art and the surpassing variety of these short pieces. |
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A fugato section appears early on in the first movement, while the contrapuntal treatment of the motifs in the development section is particularly effective. |
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Minh-ha's Reassemblage is an uncommon example of the use of contrapuntal sound, employed to critique the anthropological view of life in Senegal. |
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It is very contrapuntal and harmonically finely detailed but, in an effort both to please and to instruct, the sonata is also characterized by the melodic, gallant style that Frederick II appreciated above all. |
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Created primarily for music making among friends, these canons reveal the contrapuntal mastery of their creators, but also the capricious, witty and occasionally suggestive texts. |
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Such violent tactics would be intolerable, were they not so stirringly combined with the expressive warmth of the highly chromatic contrapuntal lines. |
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Such changes include themes sharpened melodically and musical textures enriched by the addition of new melodic entries to contrapuntal passages or by more intensive interplay of musical motives. |
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Despite his thorough contrapuntal training in London and Leipzig, as well as his experience as a church organist, Sullivan rarely composed fugues. |
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On the one hand, Schenker was an innovator who radically extended the strict contrapuntal rules of the past so that they controlled complete compositions. |
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Rouaud's fascination for cave art helped him develop a contrapuntal tale. |
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While Brandsen owes some debt to Balanchine, he offers a fresh look and approach, wonderfully independent, and sensitive to the contrapuntal values of the composer. |
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