If those resources were there, commanders could have made a bad plan work by improvising, adapting and innovating on the ground. |
|
They're living without power so they're lighting candles at night, they're smoking, some are improvising their cooking. |
|
And the food service workers who scoured the commercial kitchens improvising communal meals for hundreds of those stranded. |
|
A brigade can deploy and fight autonomously today only by improvising in some way the support it requires. |
|
This makes the duo's music sound very different to that of virtually any improvising group in existence. |
|
There's little ambiguity about the adroitness of the guitarists' noise making, and their deft improvising takes the album in sundry directions. |
|
The musician with big ears has an advantage when responding to band mates and improvising against them. |
|
Here he was, improvising a remedy with fencing wire, here he was bent double under bulging hessian sacks. |
|
L' Arpeggiata's way of improvising on these ground basses and repeated harmonic patterns is deliciously entertaining. |
|
With so many fielders on the leg side, Younis spent the better part of his innings improvising, mostly with excellent reverse-sweeps. |
|
What are the pros and cons of having the cast improvising around the scripts? |
|
Oh well, perhaps some ballets possibly do look as though the dancers were gallantly improvising. |
|
This is an area which requires serious consideration and there can be no question of improvising. |
|
However, one speaker also emphasized the importance of improvising and husbanding the finite resources at the disposal of most elected members. |
|
It is a rugged, working winery, and Mr. Travers made things work one way or another, jury-rigging equipment or improvising solutions. |
|
Our Man spends the rest of the film improvising to save his life, learning how to desalinate water and navigate celestially. |
|
You will find hardly any improvising on camera anywhere in my films. |
|
This is very different from improvising with your eyes open, because you are led by your internal energy. |
|
The picture is of a government on the defensive, improvising reactions to events. |
|
Germany's diplomats are complaining that, while Mr Schröder's position is still popular at home, he is improvising with no real strategy. |
|
|
Mr. Speaker, they are improvising case by case as opposed to giving us a policy. |
|
When will the minister and the government stop improvising desperately on immigration and give us a plan? |
|
The pioneers trained themselves on the job, improvising solutions as and when problems arose. |
|
The Organization had been improvising for too long, to the detriment of all parties concerned. |
|
Remember, I met Ruth last summer, and we had fun performing and improvising together. |
|
There is no improvising, no tinkering with the script and very little room for actors to suggest improvements. |
|
The jazz breakdowns, blistering arpeggios, and almost-catchy outro make it worth waiting through entire minutes of mindless Mixolydian mode improvising. |
|
At Temple, Coltrane no longer operated as a jazz artist improvising melodies, but more like a mystic on a vision quest. |
|
I began improvising a little introduction, and little by little I accentuated the unique rhythm of the Viennese waltz until I finally led into my favourite waltz, Neu Wien. |
|
From moments of calm and almost stillness, there is a wonderful male glee in horsing around, pushing, shoving, improvising with arms, hands, positions and timing. |
|
Leigh's evident technique is perfect for this headstrong young woman who is trapped improvising an ill-fitting role as the scenery goes up in flames around her. |
|
We set up camp on one of them, improvising with flysheets, paddles and rocks instead of using proper tents. |
|
Critics as well as peers have praised his skill at improvising and his virtuosic playing. |
|
You can experience atonality by improvising notes from the whole tone scale. |
|
If the learners wish, they can try to 'act out' the sketch, without the text, improvising from the framework of the story. |
|
The seamen from HMS Excellent were tasked to take over, piling arms and improvising drag ropes from lengths of rope commandeered from the railway station. |
|
When not playing the piano or bass, Burgalat is experimenting with the vibraphone, guitar or harmonica, and along the way trying out the flute or tenor sax, improvising with nervy, fantastic rhythms. |
|
Kahn holds up a throw pillow with a plastic potato resting in its quilted button and riffs so seamlessly you'd never guess she's improvising. |
|
When I play I always end up improvising this sort of crazy dance. |
|
The Fanfare's seven musicians are also members of an improvising collective and the rock group Orange Kazoo, so their swinging brassy effervescence springs from a pool of common experience. |
|
|
The problem is that, for a long time, these often excellent musicians were limited to the unsatisfactory role of briefly improvising between the verses sung by the choir or the cantors. |
|
You've got the fine-lace intricacy of the string instruments and then the Ex thrashing about improvising on guitar, throwing everything down in one rough take. |
|
This method awakened me to the pleasure of free expression in improvising on the piano. It also allowed me to gain pedagogical experience by training eurhythmic teachers in Biel-Bienne, in German-speaking Switzerland. |
|
Dances in which we can expect to be in physical contact at any moment and at the same time keeping an awareness of ones own direction in improvising. |
|
By March, the school had managed to re-open by sharing space with the secondary school, improvising classes under trees in the schoolyard and eventually installing large tents that house up to 70 students at a time. |
|
His later treatises include directions for improvising woodwind preludes, a practical manual for musette performers, and a variety of compositions such as duet suites and trio sonatas. |
|
She had a natural reaction when improvising. |
|
By this time, the band, which was clearly taken by surprise, has begun to join in, at first raggedly but soon improvising a respectable accompaniment. |
|
This miniature depicts a shepherd improvising a melody on his shawm. |
|
They will be singing and comping the teacher who will be improvising. |
|
In l939, a Zulu migrant worker and entertainer who called himself Solomon Linda stood before a microphone in Johannesburg's first recording studio, improvising falsetto vocal lines against a rolling, driving vocal chant. |
|
A younger woman finds pleasure in improvising lyrics to a familiar tune. |
|
Brahem's instrumental explorations never stray from the model of the takht, that little ensemble of musicians capable of improvising to the point of inebriating themselves and the public alike. |
|
They had been improvising their own security measures over the last months, because they felt that the government did not do enough to protect them. |
|
He'd stand at the board making jokes the kids didn't understand, improvising fey little couplets of dactylic verse. |
|
Directly related to framing, all the ideas and mental images of your images will make your photos more creative, whether you are preparing your shots in advance or totally improvising. |
|
It was in keyboard music after Girolamo Frescobaldi that this movement was the most pronounced: the possibility of playing and improvising alone at the harpsichord or organ is a particular stimulus to the imagination. |
|
I was just improvising the scene where Anna first meets Hans. |
|
Bell plundered 68 off them, improvising a couple of pre-mediated leg side hoicks that was straight out of the Viv Richards manual of batting unorthodoxy. |
|
Ability to ornament, octavate, play chords and do some improvising. |
|
|
Improvising hastily, the papal legate Guala is said to have crowned the new king with a chaplet of flowers. |
|
Improvising can certainly be unnerving, especially for politicians who are trained to be risk-averse. |
|