Any knowledge on modes, scales, intervals, dissonances, consonances, note names, and solmisation for example was superfluous and hence discarded. |
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Prokofiev fashioned a suite of six pieces resembling a classical divertimento, but one laced with dissonances, evoking Stravinsky's Octet. |
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In Gerald Finzi's Clarinet Concert, Michael Collins' pure, fine sound uncurled over searing dissonances from the strings. |
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Suspended dissonances, chromaticism and subtle instrumentation weaken the links with traditional tonality. |
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All four pieces bristle with energy, grating dissonances and percussive punch. |
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To match Hitchcock's sometimes surreal images, Herrmann drew upon avant-garde music by using edgy harmonies and dissonances. |
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Brash dissonances dissolve into invitingly harmonized passages, which then climb back toward thorniness. |
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Béla Bártók's sonata is a classic from the 20th century recogniced by its rythimical intensity, its drive, dissonances and virtuosity. |
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The children's choir sang with freshness of tone, clarity of diction and did not appear fazed by the dissonances that surrounded their vocal line at times. |
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But soon Courtois erupts into an improvised solo of dark chords punctuating sweeping legato lines, while Poulsen releases harmonics and dissonances behind him. |
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Exploiting the slight dissonances created by the digital acrobatics necessary to produce semi-tones, several great virtuosos composed, often for their own use, seemingly innumer-able sonatas and concertos. |
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It should be demonstrated, in what way cultural relations, but also ruptures and dissonances, are manifest in a metaphorical and symbolic level and how are expressed the literary phenomenons in different cultural contexts. |
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At the end of the first long pedal solo is a ravishing example of Italian durezze e ligature style, a series of slow moving dissonances and resolutions often incorporated into the organ music of the north German masters. |
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Serhiy Salov's goal with this project was to highlight the parallels between the two works, both of which have a coarse side, favour irregular rhythms and feature the most bizarre dissonances. |
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Your songwriting is quite rich: dissonances, alternations between clear and metal vocals are fully part of your music, but guitar solos can hardly be found. |
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The implicit paradigm in this approach to writing is that emotions are part of cognition, and that differences and dissonances between values and implicit frameworks form the very basis for change and evolution. |
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The intensity of brasses, hectic rhythm, predominance of low registers in strings, hard dissonances, create the dark atmosphere of the Planet of War. |
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Of course, the provisions contained cant be in contrast with the international ratified Conventions and possible dissonances would cause hypothesis of violations. |
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Lines, distinct shapes oppose dreamy forms, as with the mechanical rigour of the left hand whilst the right undulates, escapes, trills and produces beautiful dissonances. |
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And to abandon the modern technique of a continuous vibrato is a great aid to both the transparency of the music and to how its dissonances are perceived. |
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The scene's mythic quality is rendered uncanny, even creepy, by the microtone dissonances and irregular rumbles of Stephen Scott's electronic score. |
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Mr. Valdés played the flirt and the speed demon, moving in and out of a Cuban guajira to quote Bach or strew two-fisted dissonances up and down the keyboard. |
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A heavy, lumbering motive introduces the Intermezzo, whose music of spiky dissonances, primitivistic gestures and great heaving masses of sound surely belie its naïve title. |
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The music of the Antandroy people of Southern Madagascar is exceptional for its frequent use of closed polyphony for timbral effect, its very long parallel dissonances and its psalmodic character. |
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He was a daring harmonist: his chromaticism occasionally led to advanced enharmonic modulations, and he sometimes left dissonances unresolved for dramatic effect. |
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