Most of the tunes are instrumental, though he drafts a few guest vocalists to quietly croon or blues-up the sound. |
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You'll be too busy sighing over the plinking piano and Parker's croon to notice the anxiety of the combination. |
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He knows that he can cruise up on stage, croon out any old rubbish, flutter his eyelashes at the camera and get ten billion votes as a result. |
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Invite a Grammy-nominated jazz vocalist to croon with your best student bands and fill the theatre. |
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Should Australia's national anthem be sung straight or is it all right to warble, croon or rock it up? |
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His recognizable croon is as heartfelt as ever but it's the three-part harmonies that really transport these songs. |
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Who, back in 1991, would have guessed that his clenched-teeth complaining-voice came along with such an expressive croon? |
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Kieran held the animal to the rapid pace with a soft croon of reassurance that Michael doubted he felt. |
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Hey, if you listen carefully enough around Christmas time, you might even catch the dulcet croon of a certain Mr Bing Crosby. |
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His heavily reverbed soft croon is accompanied by a simple acoustic guitar and bongo arrangement with a slide guitar punctuating the choruses. |
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He went rigid with excitement and did a jig around the living room, keening an unearthly croon of delight. |
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His vocal performance is powerfully nuanced as he veers from a soft, uncomfortably high croon to a barely contained wail by song's end. |
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And his voice seems to be mellowing into some kind of croon, which is odd in itself. |
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He's using it more traditionally, but his blend of eerie falsetto and soulful croon remains striking. |
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He also performs some prosaic poetry of more recent vintage, before nervously taking to the mic to croon. |
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Norah Jones, guesting in her unknown, pre-Grammy days, drops by to croon I Walk the Line and a soporific Tennessee Waltz. |
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Two cans of Red Bull and a cigarette later I'm back in the land of the living only to hear Norah Jones' silky croon spewing from my speakers. |
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Still, it's great to hear her croon her way through many of the other tracks, some fairly forgettable but not entirely unpleasing love songs. |
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He even enlists Mary J. Blige to croon an emotional bridge about how much he loves Mothah Killah. |
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At first blush, it brings to mind the sultry, melancholic croon of Lana Del Rey. |
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Instead of prayer, they got a mixture of storytelling, humour and the chance to croon along to some catchy live music. |
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Limbering across to croon her covers closer to the piano, the long-legged beauty radiated an irresistible and natural charm. |
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The lilting croon of a young woman singing, the soft rumble of a man. |
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He touches softly at his guitar in that electric samba style, and his breathy croon winds the melody in and out of the occasional low swell of horns. |
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But his pop songs showcase his singing, which starts off like he's reading his journal to a bored girlfriend, then takes flight in an impassioned croon. |
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Alicia Keyes and John Legend will croon, while Cameron Diaz, Forest Whitaker, Salma Hayek and Lucy Liu add sparkle. |
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The vocals plateau at a whining croon throughout the most of the album. |
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As a result, he survived to croon his love songs into elegant old age. Throwing off his handlers took time and guile. |
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There was the sneering velvety croon, power guitar chords and sharp melodies which seemed destined for success at home, in the United States and beyond. |
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This is due no doubt in part to the hoggishness of moneyed men who would prefer to croon with crotches aflame than impart an additional farthing to the fisc, as Mr King suggests. |
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Birds and amphibians have long been known to croon in the presence of a potential mate, but among mammals only humans, whales and bats were thought to serenade a possible partner. |
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Although he's proud to croon, the singer also asserts his rock side. |
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At the center of the storm is the voice, a powerhouse instrument that can croon with tenderness, collapse amid despairing sobs, shriek in fury, moan with desire or make demands that cannot be safely ignored. |
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Popular singers who croon about the genesis of romance under the mistletoe are unwittingly referring to the pre-Christian role of that plant as a symbol of forgiveness and reconciliation. |
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Vidal smiled and began to croon the song softly into my ear. |
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