Walton, who in early days dabbled in atonality, eventually settled for neo-romanticism and his Viola Concerto is a most elegiac composition. |
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Within a remarkably short span of time they cycled through a variety of literary schools and trends, ranging from neo-romanticism to imagism to surrealism. |
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He introduces a neo-romanticism and a lyrical feel, bringing a poetry that appealed to the mind's eye. |
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In the first movement the oboe introduces the melody, quasi-ironic in its soupy neo-Romanticism, almost crass except that it avoids predictability, and is counterpointed. |
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Virtually every subsequent generation produced its own neo-Romanticism, all the way to the twentieth century. |
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And so Lepore's designs for spring are full of what she calls ''a softness, a sexiness, a boudoir feeling, a neo-Romanticism. |
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Combined with Canada-based Chinese composer Kuan Nai-chung's bombastic score, a blend of Western neo-Romanticism and Chinese harmonics, it makes for a wearisome experience. |
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