The 250 of us assigned there dropped our packs, duffle bags, rifles, barracks bags and musette bags. |
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In fact, the eventual winner took on no food nor musette bag at the Brest control and carried only three water bottles. |
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A musette bag holds food and drinks and gets handed to the Tour riders in the feed zone. |
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As we prepared for the day's march, my head felt a bit sore from some hard object in my musette bag. |
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This musette bag is made from waterproof and ultra quiet stealth cloth with a waterproof rubber backing. |
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The piccolo oboe or musette used to be a bagpipe chanter and was very popular at the time of Marie-Antoinette at the French Court in Versailles. |
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The boys tossed out personal gear from their musette bags and filled them with ammunition. |
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Halfway through a stage, Armstrong grabs a musette, also known as a feedbag, from a roadside team staffer. |
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Their music was a mix of jazz, French musette, flamenco, and east European styles. |
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A dance that probably originated in the Auvergne, where it was accompanied by such folk instruments as the musette or the hurdy-gurdy. |
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Exceptions are the zampogna, the musette, and the uillean pipes, which have double reeds throughout. |
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He was born in 1917 in rue de Lappe, above a bal musette, in the Bastille district. |
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The second became the desire to do the same thing for all five oboes from musette to bass. |
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My compass is the same one that my dad had in his musette bag 60 or so years ago. |
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Thirty musette bags filled with two bottles, two gels, two bars, two candy bars, two pastries, and some fruit are made. |
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He wants out just after hearing of Georgette's fight at the bal musette. |
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The racist suspicions of the French toward Mediterraneans underlay the eventual ironic triumph of Italian accordion music as the defining Parisian sound of hal musette. |
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During A Cultural Feast, accordionist Luc Lopez will create a lively ambience in a Parisian bistro with his musette trio. |
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Examples of bellows-blown bagpipes include the Northumbrian small-pipes, the Scottish Lowland or Border bagpipe, the Irish uillean bagpipe, the musette, and the dudy. |
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Long before this, in the mid-nineteenth century, the French poet Charles Cros was reciting, not singing, his poems to the music of a bal musette band. |
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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. |
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