It's dark, at times brooding, but brimming full of energy and orchestration. |
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With chiming percussion to the fore, transparency and subtlety are the characteristics of the orchestration. |
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He also opens up the music's textures, clarifying orchestration that can seem muddy in other conductors' hands. |
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The album is stuffed with queasy midtempo tracks and bizarre orchestration, but it's by no means impenetrable. |
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He was daring and intelligent, produced huge plays and scared defenses with his orchestration of the offense. |
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It has an often light orchestration, with lots of harp, tinkly percussion, and celesta and even harpsichord. |
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The opening orchestration evokes for me the sound of the African thumb piano, although one of symphonic size. |
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With a throng of guests adding lush orchestration to most of the tracks, it is Campbell's understated wispy vocal that ties the tunes together. |
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The people who are running the convention have created four days of acute orchestration designed to get maximum response. |
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The background music swells to a crescendo of heavenly orchestration in a moment intended to make audiences feel proud. |
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He went to London and worked with an arranger to record accompanying orchestration. |
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Most compositions are swirling masses of intense orchestration mixed once again with this signature drum 'n' bass lite rhythm programming. |
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It gives you a much greater appreciation for the orchestration of the whole team required for a play to go smoothly. |
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It is indeed a masterpiece of delicate and polished orchestration and as he said, an aquarelle by a great landscape painter. |
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The orchestration of both music by Tchaikovsky and original material by Gavin Sutherland brings an engaging lightness to the ballet. |
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It has also been continuously reorchestrated, Adam's original orchestration having long since been lost. |
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A white boy dancer must deliver an impotent, but ironic, rendering of White's orchestration of potent sexuality. |
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He introduced a new dramatic role for orchestration with scores that are richly textured, subtle, and profound. |
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These albums were groundbreaking explorations into chilled electronica, infused with jazzy grooves and live orchestration. |
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Is it heresy to suggest that an occasional revival of his long-discredited but more glittery orchestration might not be such a crime? |
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It is about as drop-dead beautiful as vocal music gets, enveloped in luminous orchestration. |
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The great Classical works depend in part on the mastery of orchestration they display. |
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He had a unique style and he was a master of orchestration, particularly for the steelband. |
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And here is an orchestration of imagery that is as powerful as it is discreet. |
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Visitors can search using a variety of options including keyword, tempo, style, composer and orchestration, just to name a few. |
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This effort required the careful orchestration of men, machines, and supplies. |
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The orchestration is again brilliant, with particularly effective use of trumpets, pizzicato, string moto perpetuo, harp, and glockenspiel. |
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Despite the precision involved, building a home is an art that requires the careful orchestration of the various trades involved. |
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The heavy shadows that cling to the orchestration of his more serious-minded works disappear. |
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Their sound was drowned in the recording and orchestration by their producer, so that rock-and-roll beat went down the drain. |
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There is plenty of forward melodic motion, clear textures, and fine orchestration. |
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His music is readily approachable, engaging the heart in pleasant groves of melody all overhung with verdure of lush orchestration. |
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I want you to write a very light, happy piece, witty, mercurial, like a Scarlatti Sonata, using a small chamber-like transparent orchestration? |
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The notes say nothing about the orchestration, which to my ears sounds like Shostakovich's 1940 instrumentation rather than Mussorgsky's rougher original. |
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His first French opera was coolly received in 1788, though in many ways it foreshadowed his mature style with its rich orchestration and dramatic conclusion. |
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Debussy made as much use of silence as of sound to express emotion, and in the orchestration each instrument was given a delicate colour of its own to blend into the painting. |
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Later, McChrystal asked Metcalf for an orchestration, first for strings, and then for strings and harp, which is the version McChrystal played here. |
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It makes people shiver, but the painter indulges in beige-greys, which, in rich orchestration, he applies thickly and vivaciously to the canvas. |
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I have to say, I worked with some really excellent jazz musicians to achieve the orchestration I'd dreamt up in my head. |
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While there may be a scripting or an orchestration of the emotions, individuals vary in the degree to which they internalize and follow scripts. |
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And, as with Beethoven at his most emphatic, percussive accents pervade the orchestration. |
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An outstanding and prolific craftsman, a master of orchestration and counterpoint, he was a classicist and a traditionalist. |
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This no doubt led him to structure his work clearly in a formalist manner, with both concise orchestration stripped of any imagination. |
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The opulent, yet bright orchestration and the chromatic melismata around the tritone and the melodic minor scale all point toward the composer of Schelomo. |
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Posing as a craftsman of singing-song-writing, Duteil penned a very unsophisticated album with a discreet orchestration. |
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This version, exciting though it is, gives little idea of the originality of Musorgsky's own orchestration. |
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The album, basically a play in three acts, features sharper, more incisive songs and less orchestration than usual. |
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There is the risk of the commercialisation of human life and the orchestration of women for the purpose of egg donation. |
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She has worked on a number of productions on many capacities: casting, staging, musical orchestration, and costume design. |
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This was my final project for a great orchestration class that I took this spring in the Music Department. |
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I can always be heard and no orchestration can cover the sound of my cello. |
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The focus of the exhibition is on Giacometti's vibrant orchestration of light and the colorist energy of his paintings. |
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It sounds like this is the original version of the song as it was before the orchestration was added. |
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The music, in an expressive orchestration for harpsichord and strings, was a filigreed structure upon which Miller's wonderfully individual dancers climbed and played. |
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A recent project of yours has been the orchestration of Debussy preludes. |
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The vast orchestration in context is reminiscent of her home country, and the drama in the tracks take more from programmatic classical music than pop. |
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One of the big joys of this production, after the divine euphony of Kremer's sound, is the return to the eleven-instrument orchestration of Piazzolla's original score. |
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Blanchett achieves this through a level of nuanced physical and aural orchestration that brims over with virtuoso counterpoint. |
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I then move things around, figuring out the larger orchestration, almost like a piece of sheet music. |
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Instead, the symphony is built on song-like thematic fragments of Kancheli's own devising, deployed and contrasted with unusually colourful orchestration. |
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Full of allusions and caricatural aspects, the piece is difficult and challenging, but its rich and luscious orchestration more than makes up for its complexities. |
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Full of allusions and caricatural aspects, the piece is challenging, but its rich and luscious orchestration more than makes up for its complexities. |
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The festival will include the high-tech wizardry of Decoufle, known for his orchestration of the ceremonies of the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, France. |
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There's no horse-trading, no brilliant orchestration of competing interests to reveal a previously unthought of solution, that is going to reconcile those sets of goals. |
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At its controversial opening night Nijinsky's choreography was considered almost as shocking as the churning rhythms and clamorous orchestration of Stravinsky's score. |
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The orchestration then slowly fades out save the gentle guitar picking. |
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Perhaps because of its large orchestration, live performances of the Requiem are rare. |
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A new orchestration of the film's theme tune was played during each medal presentation of the Games. |
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One of the most recognisable features in Sullivan's orchestration is his woodwind scoring. |
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All through we have orchestration of infinite delicacy, tunes of alarming simplicity, but never a tinge of vulgarity. |
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The orchestration was arranged by Simone Benyacar, Dan Nielsen, and Veigar Margeirsson. |
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Although the Daily Star and L'Orient Le Jour openly disapprove of Syria's orchestration of certain protests, it remains true that the people are angry. |
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But Strauss did not succumb to such disillusionment, developing instead in his symphonic poems and monumental operas a lyric sensuousness and lush orchestration that made him the last of the great romantics. |
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Their music evokes the desert, vast spaces, and the sun at high noon. It stands out on account of its authenticity, particular rhythms and one-of-a-kind orchestration. |
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Among these were masters of orchestration from whom he learned much, such as Berlioz and Richard Wagner. |
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Elgar's distinctive orchestration, as well as his melodic inspiration, lifts them to a higher level than most of their British predecessors. |
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His orchestration has an individuality, incisiveness and integration with the musical material only achieved by the greatest composers. |
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As his skills matured, he developed a style uniquely his own, characterised by his individual orchestration and his uses of chromatic harmony. |
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Whatever others thought of Wagner's vocal writing and ponderousness, none could deny his control of harmony, dramatic structure, and orchestration. |
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The album's sound is reminiscent of the late Elliott Smith, or even Scott Walker, both of them brilliant composers who have never been so present as in the orchestration of this new Cocoon creation. |
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Prompted by her close acquaintance with the musicians of La Pietà, Louise-Andrée Baril decided in her orchestration of Czárdás to share the principal melody amongst the leaders of each section in the orchestra. |
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We shall blend at the same time, writing, orchestration and improvisation as well, on the musical elements offered by the young composers participating to the workshop. |
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It is generally felt that baldness is an orchestration of several genes. |
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The Supreme Court confirmed that the branch manager's orchestration of the mass resignation was inconsistent with and in clear breach of his obligation to perform his branch manager duties in good faith. |
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What we reject is the orchestration of such by a grasping, centralising EU for the purpose of forcing an unwanted political integration upon the citizens of those nation states. |
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It featured further experimentation by the band, who expanded their use of synthesisers and mellotron orchestration. |
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At that time, of course, they were encouraged by the United States, because that was pre-Dayton and part of the whole orchestration Holbrooke was working out, that of diplomacy and force. |
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The vendor uses Ensemble's business process orchestration, business rules engine, workflow, and other features to create composite applications that make credit union operations much more efficient. |
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The orchestration of such collective remembering and, if necessary, collective amnesia, constitutes the crucial underpinning of national-state identities. |
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Sybase, an Eclipse Steward since 2002, was one of the first companies to release a commercially available product on the Eclipse framework as a part of an award-winning business process orchestration and monitoring tool. |
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A highly gifted student, he received his diploma in 1941 and obtained first class honours in composition, orchestration, piano and history of music. |
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The PSNI confirmed on Thursday that it was examining social network sites to investigate any level of orchestration or co-ordination in the protests and attacks on Alliance members and regional offices. |
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It may take different music and decide which genre it belongs to, learning to look for the tempo and drum sounds of heavy metal, or the orchestration of a classical piece. |
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An Army Order was duly issued in 1933, which laid down regulations for tempo, dynamics and orchestration. |
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The atmospheric effects and the fresh lyrical melodies in this work revealed the mind of an original composer, while the animated orchestration looked forward to the orchestral manner of Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov. |
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These two albums are characterized by spheric and vibrant atmospheres sophisticated orchestration. |
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The American election campaign is getting into high gear with a well-oiled orchestration of the conflict between the two main adversaries, George Bush and John Kerry. |
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Classical orchestration, keyboards and synthesisers were a frequent addition to the established rock format of guitars, bass and drums in subsequent progressive rock. |
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Once the orchestration process has been completed, the sheet music is physically printed onto paper by one or more music copyists, and is ready for performance. |
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Remarkably, higher education's allure has persisted despite recent efforts to tarnish it by academic management and mass media orchestration of an anticollege crusade. |
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Works of classical repertoire often exhibit complexity in their use of orchestration, counterpoint, harmony, musical development, rhythm, phrasing, texture, and form. |
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Bourne pioneered revivals of Messiah in Handel's orchestration, and Bourne's work was the basis for further scholarly versions in the early 20th century. |
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There follows a solemn-sounding but rewarding orchestration of Contrapunctus XIX from Bach's Die Kunst der Fugue, quite a contrast from the jaunty Purcell tune. |
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The film's orchestration started in the summer with Conrad Pope, the orchestrator on the first three Harry Potter films, collaborating with Desplat. |
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