There is a high reliance on speed, and editing syncopated to the rhythms of a fast music-track, regardless of context. |
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Their easy, rolling rhythms and rich colouring influenced many other Canadian landscape painters. |
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Pollock's solution was to study and copy the compositions of the old masters so intently that he internalized their rhythms. |
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The patterns, viewable from the Price Tower as a roof facade, contrast with the angular, syncopated rhythms of Wright's design. |
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Stress disrupts fundamental rhythms of the nervous system, leading to more frequent awakenings and more shallow sleep. |
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Kids will practice repeating various rhythms as well as moving to the beat. |
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The stimulant drugs are based on amphetamine and carry a risk of sudden death from fatal heart rhythms. |
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In Legong Keraton, as in much Balinese dance, the movement is closely associated with the intricate rhythms produced by the gamelan ensemble. |
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Langorous horns, ticking guitars and muted keyboards have been added, sketching out long, graceful arcs of melody over the bubbling rhythms. |
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All beings in nature, corporeal or spiritual, are made up of combinations and rhythms of the Elements. |
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The Brazilian fans' samba rhythms may be loose, but when it comes to their national team, they are incredibly high-strung and impatient. |
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Originally inspired by secular rhythms, Gospel's distinctive toe-tapping church music was hugely influential in rock 'n' roll. |
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The rhythms of both Greek and Latin poetry are based on the quantitative length of syllables, not on stress accent as are English rhythms. |
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Are the rhythms truly accurate, and do they give the music life, or are they only metronomic? |
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It operates within the larger context of the local community and the rhythms and relationship of nature and the cosmos. |
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His choreography is full of intricate rhythms done with up-tempo swing and other driving jazz music forms. |
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She has a special feel for swing and Latin dance rhythms and enjoys seeing patrons get up and dance while she is playing solo. |
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The company beat out rhythms with their canes, hoisting them overhead and twirling them in unison, their footwork crisp in Morse code mode. |
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The production sounds great and the music is very interesting, with shifting rhythms and moods. |
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The ethnic mix of vocals and rhythms works a treat while each artist remains faithful to their original style. |
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Chanting rhythms and imagery of Egyptian myth and Swahili praise poem enact the symbolic death and rebirth of all Black women. |
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Ska Cubano bring hot Cuban rhythms and Ska together in this big band musical extravaganza. |
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Which means, I imagine, that Mr. Rascal comes from the streets, and has something to do with trip-hop junglist urban rhythms. |
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On the other hand, Jaki is clearly present in the rhythms which are straightforward but tricksy, deliberate but playful. |
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Sowing seed, cultivating, and harvesting according to cosmic rhythms is one aspect of biodynamics that fascinates most people. |
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Nigerian music is dependent on strong rhythms supplied by countless drums and percussion instruments. |
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In these the imagination invents the rhythms to which the observed details will give a solid presence. |
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Fricsay makes the rhythms snap, and once again his control over orchestral color is exemplary. |
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In her abstractions, she strove, like many painters of the day, to create a visual equivalent for jazz's improvisations and rhythms. |
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The deep and mystical quality of the dance and its inner rhythms have been captured. |
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The fascination about this musical is the exciting rock rhythms and the memorable, lyrical melodies. |
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While discussing the mechanisms underlying circadian rhythms, it would be well worth mentioning their genetic basis. |
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Jet lag happens when the body's circadian rhythms are disrupted by changes in light. |
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In continuous light, circadian growth rhythms were detectable for up to 2 weeks. |
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Still slower ultradian rhythms, with a period of 2 h, and circadian rhythms have also been observed. |
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The singing was amplified, the rhythms syncopated and the plot one-dimensional. |
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Intensity and loudness increases by the middle of the movement, with some sharp attacks by the strings, with drums and syncopated rhythms. |
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The existence of daily rhythms in the regulation of many body processes has been well documented in the last 50 years. |
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A series of dances by warriors, Persian slave girls, and Polovtsian maidens followed one another in pounding rhythms. |
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For several years he studied Indian music and a special quality of his music is the incorporation of both Nordic themes and East Indian rhythms. |
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Adventurous interpretations of ska and reggae rhythms are an important part of their formula. |
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Earth has guessed much and rhythms the hymn behind the world in the stroke of her waves. |
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His pianism is outstanding, phrasing is supple, and rhythms are alert and buoyant. |
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The dual vocals over heavy groove riffs and head-nodding rhythms are as fluid as ever. |
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Her music presents instrumentals and melodies that blend classical, contemporary jazz, pop and African rhythms into a seamless style. |
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I hope that others can assemble the jagged rhythms of my stories to unlearn common misperceptions about vernacular English. |
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With his best concentration it was still beyond him, the rhythms too disjointed, the shifts from discord into harmony too complex. |
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Richard adds to the enchantment of these tales with the rhythms of his mountain dulcimer and conga drum. |
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It acts as the body's principal circadian pacemaker, regulating and entraining daily rhythms of physiology and behavior. |
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They provided a detailed account of how attentional rhythms are entrained by external rhythms. |
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The finale, chock-full of thrown rhythms, is a bit cavalier too, but serves as a cheerful envoi to the whole series of seven. |
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Moreover, while minor amino acids show marked diurnal rhythms, their contents fluctuate in a co-ordinated manner. |
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This apparently inefficient system gives us the ability to deal with the natural variability of the diurnal rhythms of light and temperature. |
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Experiments were performed always at the same time of the day, to avoid interference with diurnal rhythms. |
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Pure West African rhythms can still be heard in the drum-driven ceremonies of voodoo and santeria throughout the Caribbean and South America. |
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A cacophony of rhythms and sounds stream through the studio walls and flood the air. |
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The timbre and cadence of his drawling voice startle at first and the listener becomes absorbed by his speech rhythms, pauses, and inflections. |
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They should bring to life the droning intonations and cadential prolongation his music shares with the undulating rhythms of Russian prayer. |
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Even its somber rhythms, tinged with a cold electronic feeling, speak of disillusionment and estrangement. |
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Her rhythms were dead-on crisp and accurate, and she brought out all the color and exuberance the score demands. |
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When the music is canned, the performers must perform to its rhythms and their timing is constricted. |
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The rhythms of the tides were in an Oceanian's blood, the coursing of the currents in an Oceanian's arteries. |
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All too often, particularly in the early days of modern dance, the class was done to the simple rhythms of a drumbeat. |
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An enormous puzzle surrounds the fact that Laskey even survived to find such rhythms and ensorcell local art aficionados with them. |
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Gypsy sounds not unlike what we heard in the other piece invade the second movement, with its pulsating Stravinskian rhythms. |
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Themes could be presented in different rhythms or metres, or with different orchestrations, or with slight changes in melody. |
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The guitar piece flows through multiple movements, some full of frenzied rhythms and interlocking ostinatos, others brimming with melodic grace. |
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The advancing camera discloses that the black mass consists of women in chadors, bobbing in unruly rhythms. |
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According to the curator of the project, combining these images with Latino rhythms makes for a hot-blooded mix. |
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They then began to beat wild and arcane rhythms on their knives and fly swatters. |
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The mellow tracks mix gauzy female harmonies with easy rhythms for a swoony effect. |
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This track combines artfully disjointed melodies with low-fi bass, syncopated rhythms, and all the atmosphere of a David Lynch soundtrack. |
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Disturbances in this ration can alter cardiac rhythms, transmission and conduction of nerve impulses, and muscle contraction. |
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Melodies sing, phrases are shaped like clay on a potter's wheel, and rhythms are given a gentle bounce. |
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A defibrillator emits a series of electric shocks, these make sure the heart does not have erratic rhythms. |
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The music is a sophisticated meshing of guitars, busily efficient rhythms and electronica. |
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The whole set consists of rather humorous songs based on folk rhythms, melancholic dumkas and lyrical or even dramatic romances. |
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A string quartet was playing merrily in the corner and hundreds of feet were tapping out uneven rhythms on the mosaic marble floor. |
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Even at its best, conversation is full of repetitions, fillers, fragmentary phrases, and minimal rhythms. |
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Flute, fiddle and pipes take the melody, above driving guitar and bouzouki rhythms, with vocals in stirring three or four-part harmony. |
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As the drummer spits out a cacophony of quick-wristed rhythms and slashing fills, the music rages on to a cathartic finale. |
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In olden-day Africa, getting the message was a matter of listening carefully for the rhythms of pounding pigskin. |
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Possible complications include wound and chest infections and abnormal heart rhythms. |
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The Latino rhythms are very passionate and the rumba is known as the dance of love. |
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Irresistible rhythms, glorious colour and costumes, and oodles of talent melded with skilful direction into a whammy of a production! |
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This will no doubt be a joyful event of global dance rhythms and songs, so bring your dancing shoes and get ready to be uplifted. |
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He has nothing to do with the choppy rhythms of the Rococo, nor its obvious confession of make-believe. |
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These albums showcase the band's unique blend of traditional rhythms and elements of jazz, pop, jazz-fusion and classical. |
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Nils Petter Molvaer, an electric jazz player is a virtuoso trumpet player who endows his music with exotic elements and broken rhythms. |
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Drum-thumping salsa rhythms carried the procession through the city as showers of flowers were thrown from a large tower to people below. |
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As Montreal finally heats up just in time for festival season, the familiar colours and rhythms of Carifiesta are just around the corner. |
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Deneff exploits rock idioms, such as rapidly repeated chords, ostinato bass lines and syncopated rhythms, but with little variation of content. |
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He experimented constantly with rhythms and stresses and verse forms, disliking and avoiding any facile flow. |
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For over three centuries we have been attempting to separate our selves from the organic processes and rhythms of the natural world. |
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Everybody's on board here, and everything just sails along on the charm of its people and the snappiness of Soderbergh's rhythms. |
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Many of the songs by French artists come with a Latin lilt and tracks from Haiti and Mauritius bring in new instruments and warmer rhythms. |
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By the mid-1890s, such rhythms were being applied to both the standard form of the march and to the song form. |
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Each song is earthy, creating a soundscape with peaceful melodies, calming rhythms and animal noises. |
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The dance was born in Argentina, via the local milonga and African Candombe rhythms. |
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The chord changes aren't rocket science, but the rhythms are fast and the fills are rare, quick and poisonous. |
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Many of the most important evolutions in this process were nurtured by the rhythms of the liturgical year. |
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We no longer live in a time when the routines of household life revolve around the rhythms of the kitchen. |
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Whereas in Carnatic rhythms, tempos ascend in geometric progression, the corresponding changes in Kerala rhythms occur in arithmetic progression. |
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Music trucks blasted as they moved at what seemed like one mile an hour as the revelers gyrated to soca rhythms. |
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The rhythms come from ragga, drum 'n' bass, even Bollywood, while punk's fuzzy guitar broadsides pepper the choruses. |
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Many consider him the father of Afrobeat, that is the combination of Nigerian high-life and Yoruba rhythms with funk, soul and jazz. |
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His buoyant, spicy soprano sax is front and centre, burbling among the snappy rhythms and lush textures of the vibrantly produced tracks. |
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Tender keyboard melodies and skeletal guitar rhythms are glued together in darkness. |
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But the dancer's feet moved to the rhythms of Kathak, drummed on the tabla. |
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These guys are laying down a night of Afro-Latin jazz, funk and soul rhythms for the people, and you're invited! |
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A boy and a girl twirl frenetically yet effortlessly around a dance floor to the brassy rhythms of a swing band. |
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But you have to know how to use bold, brassy rhythms to make light of serious subjects. |
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Greatly influenced by DC hardcore forebears like Fugazi, QANU's music bristled with taut, pointed rhythms and impassioned verse. |
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Its cadences follow the rhythms of machines, and pull the reader into its moments of repetition, into its pauses. |
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The album mixes up the rhythms, adding a couple of Cuban-flavoured boleros and even some Dominican bachata. |
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Huang also includes cross-rhythms, syncopated rhythms and an array of standard meters. |
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This feature was reflected in the development of Anglo-Irish metrics and was first felt through the rhythms of folksongs. |
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Both he and Frost advocated the use of natural diction, and of colloquial speech rhythms in metrical verse. |
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In addition, a built-in metronome can accommodate standard and odd-metered rhythms and be programmed for future time changes. |
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In this paper, a presumptive role for infradian hormonal rhythms is considered. |
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Standing with loosely relaxed knees, they start to work their feet by stamping rhythms on the floor. |
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Some of the pan players broke into song, adding flair to the band's rendition as the pan sticks belted down the pulsating rhythms. |
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This kind of demented shoegazing stoner prog is all about the stomping rhythms and the elasticated, mind-bending guitars. |
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Finally came the time of machines, and rhythms of life became increasingly feverish and frantic. |
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All race events will start and finish at Mary Fitzgerald Square in Newtown, where various artists will soothe tired bodies with cool rhythms. |
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It lets your mind consider rhymes, rhythms and images you would never have used if you were writing in free verse. |
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His prose, rich in dialect and at times fragmented into poetic line breaks, is well worth the time required to fully comprehend its rhythms. |
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The opening sinfonia for strings and trombones is remarkably like several opera overtures of the time, with square rhythms. |
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The great rhythms of the earth are built on motion and on the intervals or pauses. |
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With its gentle yet complex melodies and rhythms, it was hailed as her finest work to date. |
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Together with the consistent use of dotted and syncopated rhythms they become hallmarks of Skalkottas's musical language. |
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Optical rhythms and illusions combine with forms sharply delineated by means of tape. |
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They reflect popular music tastes of the time, most notably an interest in the seductive rhythms of the tango. |
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Peul musicians play handcrafted flutes, drums, and string instruments, and they use calabashes to beat out rhythms. |
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In the past, the women performed the rhythms by sitting on tiny stools, singing and beating little rattles or bamboos cut lengthwise. |
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Their performance of world music, featuring African rhythms sung a cappella, should be a treat. |
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Funk music was exported to Africa in the late 1960s, and melded with African singing and rhythms to form Afrobeat. |
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He was dancing in his chair and clapping and beating out rhythms in the air, singing and scatting and engaging in repartee with the performers. |
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People naturally respond to the diminutive sax man's keening sound, funky rhythms and bluesy riffs. |
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On this album he experiments with honky tonk rhythms, string arrangements, and sassy backing vocals. |
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Plucked strings, bluegrass rhythms, deep gospel accompaniment and stories of sinners and devils are the order of the day. |
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When his operas are sung in any other language, the shift in vowels, consonants, and rhythms changes the character of the music. |
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Bauman patently sees no place for himself in a media world that insists on drumming the tedious rhythms of consumerism into the public psyche. |
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Built-in computers analyze the person's heart rhythm and interpret the rhythms that require defibrillation shocks. |
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Around the room, heads bobbed ever so slightly to pleasant Cuban rhythms while we turned our attention to the bill of fare. |
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With the band stretching out into extended jams with re-arranged tempos and rhythms, the misses occur much less often than you might imagine. |
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His rondeaux and many of his ballades combine different, often highly syncopated, rhythms. |
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He would insert folk tunes into his exercises or submit pieces with free rhythms, quarter-tones and multilayered textures. |
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Capoeira, for those not in the know, is a Brazilian martial art form that blends acrobatics and dance with pounding African rhythms. |
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In addition to quarters, eighths and sixteenth notes, triplets and dotted rhythms are used tastefully and add variety. |
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The perfect little brick acropolis is in the middle of the forest, and its mullions echo the rhythms of the surrounding dark tree-trunks. |
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Besides incorporating chimurenga music based on the rhythms of the mbira, Mtukudzi borrows from mpaqanga and jit. |
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There were clearly standouts in terms of talent, natural ability, comfort in their bodies and natural rhythms. |
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With its opening driving bass rhythms and subdued organ entrance you are immediately seduced by its hypnotic beat. |
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In a few cases his rhythms are a bit stiff-jointed, but one undeniable sign of accomplishment is his knack for the killer ending. |
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The term juba comes from the name of the chief drummer in the jubilee songs who pounded out the rhythms on celebration days of black culture. |
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On first reading one may not understand all the meanings within a poem, but one can appreciate its rhythms and imagery. |
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Their search for the perfect beat has resulted in a series of sound experiments packed with cyclic grooves and hypnotic rhythms. |
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Some of these have involved minutely detailed descriptions of snare drum accents and eight-to-the-bar boogie-woogie rhythms. |
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The meter, complexity of rhythms created by dotted rhythms, triplets and irregular accents manifest the spirit of Korean peasant dance and music. |
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Circadian rhythms are known to be exhibited by all peripheral tissues and mammalian cells in culture. |
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The ebb and flow of tides, swinging winds, and rising and falling ocean swells create the changing rhythms of a surfer's life. |
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The tune was also adapted to regional music genres like the Tex-Mex flavor of Texas, salsa in New York, and the mana-style rhythms of California. |
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Harmonic wind harps transpose the spirit of the wind into spontaneous, multi-layered music in time to nature's rhythms. |
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While the two-voice texture does indeed simplify the music, because of the complex rhythms it is not particularly easy music to play. |
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As one would expect from the combination, it's a mostly upbeat effort with light rhythms and airy melodies. |
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Its Bartok-like application of folk rhythms to a disjointed and ferocious melodicism is interesting but on the whole, not very exciting. |
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Andrew can pick out a lovely melody but his harmonies often seem out and he's better with melodies than he is with rhythms, for the moment. |
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This is a selection of dance workouts set to a diverse mix of music and rhythms. |
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Lakshmi and Shanmuga display a succession of foot rhythms and sculpturesque poses, graceful movements of arms and body. |
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By doing this, we end up aligning our own biorhythms with the universal rhythms. |
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In the quiet countryside there are rhythms of drums beating for all to hear. |
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The mercurial troubadour has forsaken 88 keys in favor of syncopated rhythms, turntables and a human beatbox. |
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It was in these clubs that Kaufman would experiment with the complex rhythms of bebop. |
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She's fashioned an album of salsa, calypso, habanera, mambo, meringue and other Caribbean rhythms. |
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Not as raw as ethnic Latino rhythms like salsa, son, samba and merengue but bearing some of their signatures. |
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His pictures are neither symbolic nor meretriciously anecdotal, but his colour and the rhythms and forms he paints are highly suggestive. |
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These still images were edited together digitally, the video edited frame by frame to produce movement and rhythms. |
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In most of these compositions, the physical routine of executing difficult rhythms is amply reinforced by plenty of repetition. |
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We can measure his heart rhythms, take his blood pressure and even amputate a limb. |
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But in return, the occupants get an incomparably intimate connection to the rhythms of the river. |
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We who are attuned to the cycles of Nature and the rhythms of the Earth often feel overwhelmed by the escalating environmental crises. |
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There are a lot of echoes, for instance, and these either stretch the small metallic sounds out into drones or create sharp, stuttering rhythms. |
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On the contrary, many compositions strive for more elaborate contours, rhythms, and harmonic structures. |
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They had a CD of Christmassy tunes set to standard dance rhythms, and jiving to Slade was most enjoyable! |
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On their debut full-length, they combine syncopated ska guitars, manic horns, driving punk rhythms and frontman Tomas Kalnoky's raspy vocals. |
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All of the dancers created amazing syncopated rhythms through just small movements of their feet, never losing a beat. |
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Trotter uses this music to introduce octaves, accented rhythms, a whole tone scale and a continuous cross-hand pattern. |
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Such internal clocks are known as circadian clocks, which are tuned to biological rhythms that recur on a daily basis. |
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It turned into five weeks' hard labour as we unravelled the intricate rhythms and built the complex set. |
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But larger audiences turned out to be amazed at the excitement, vigor, and intriguing rhythms they had been missing. |
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What we end up with is a surprisingly harmonious blend of, well, video game tunes and traditional style Celtic rhythms. |
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Their style ranges from speedy, old-school punk rock to more complex folksy rhythms, and it's all good. |
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I think young students will enjoy the fun rhythms, tuneful melodies and the influence of jazz harmonies. |
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The band fused the abrasive, amplified timbres and motoric rhythms of rock with the string and brass writing of the classical tradition. |
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Live, the four piece are a brooding mixture of visceral, post-punk textures and relentless motorik rhythms. |
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They're not completely arrhythmic, the rhythms are just highly unconventional, often with different parts playing in different time signatures. |
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Here again the listless rhythms gather images and ideas into poems of real power. |
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There were quite a few bands doing ska and reggae rhythms with a punk rock attitude and punk rock music. |
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There are grace notes and syncopations aplenty, with swing rhythms supplying the underlying pulse. |
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As Taj sang and strummed his big guitar, kids as young as five and as old as 17 were bobbing their heads to the rhythms of the blues. |
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Around the turn of the century, composers began to experiment with atonality, dissonance and primitive rhythms. |
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We do have a Cuban influence also, mostly in the cowbells I use and the rhythms. |
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Across campus, in an old carriage house converted into a tap studio, Grant teaches a daunting tap passage by reciting just the rhythms. |
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The mathematical rhythms and yearning lyrics of Tagore's songs are hard to resist. |
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In the distance, a saltarello has started up, and soon the air is alive with pounding rhythms and bright colours. |
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Jet lag is due to the desynchronisation between various body rhythms and environmental rhythms. |
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Shiftwork frequently causes a desynchronization between the sleep-wake cycle, light-darkness rhythm, and other endogenous biological rhythms. |
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Feet of Song explores the African rhythms of the talking drum and the guitar. |
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Then imagine yourself surrounded by sizzling synths, drunken piano stomps, and lock-step pirate rhythms. |
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He even notated the rhythms of his music out loud, something all tap dancers do in their heads. |
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Alfred is a simon-pure Republican, rocked in his cradle to the stirring rhythms of G.O.P. speeches, grown to a man sure to vote the party line. |
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You almost feel as if you're walking those cold stony streets with him, breathing the scent of smoke and coffee, hearing the rhythms of the city. |
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The ostinato rhythms and other exotic complications produce music that seems to come from the Far East. |
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Somewhat arty post-glam stabby guitars and twitchy rhythms, all performed at a ridiculously uptempo rate. |
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When I first heard those tribal rhythms pounding overhead I thought it was kind of cool, kind of boho. |
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Firefly was one of the first Indian groups to experiment with original scores combining Indian ragas with hip rhythms of Western music. |
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Young people want the right to dance to grinding rhythms all night long while their parents fear it will turn them into degenerate scofflaws. |
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Waltz rhythms are employed as well as tango patterns and even a touch of bolero. |
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From rumba to bolero, Felip will explore the energetic and sensual roots of Latin songs and rhythms. |
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With its saturated colors and full, undulating rhythms, the mural is like a flower springing out of a crack in a concrete wall. |
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The Glasgow-based band's debut delivers on its promises of glam-rock mutated into disco rhythms with interest. |
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Sathya displays a succession of foot rhythms and sculpturesque poses with playful eyes, graceful movement of arms and body. |
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Do you need large doses of garage, deep house and Afro Latin rhythms to get your head together? |
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The work does not go beyond third position, and there are no complex rhythms or bowing patterns. |
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The asymmetric rhythms of their unison duet invigorated the music's persistence. |
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Infectious dance music came from Ben Jam, with a swinging swaying set blending sega with Caribbean rhythms. |
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The melodies and tunes are distinctly their own, the rhythms, the lyrics, the basslines. |
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Its raw strident sound was one of the first to make use of the rhythms of jazz. |
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Fabio is a master of the traditional 22-key Mbira thumb piano, and his mix of east and north African tribal rhythms is truly mesmerising. |
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Kahakalau's multicultural, multilingual background is reflected in her music, which ranges from soft Hawaiian rhythms to funky reggae beats. |
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By the end of the first six weeks, students were expected to carefully work out and comfortably learn all notes, rhythms, fingerings, dynamics and articulations. |
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My bike accelerates faster, though, and it's a lot more agile, and I have a clear picture in my head of the city grid for this section and a feel for the traffic rhythms. |
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They camped out at a local garage rock band's house and played noisy, careening rhythms to a small number of bemused punks at the old Multipurpose Rumpus Room. |
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It departs from the usual folklorist concept of Hispanic rhythms. |
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Breth suggests such things as a week's score of metronome practice, practicing in rhythms, chord voicing, jumps, counting and trill drills, and relaxation. |
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Davis chose at this time to meld together some of the primal, guttural aspects of rock, particularly in the bottom end, rhythms, drums and the bass. |
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Whether it's in the form of romantic melody, upbeat Swing Jazz or exotic world rhythms, the live musical experience adds a unique presence and excitement to any event. |
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But when whole careers are now staked on micro-sized melodies and formulaic rhythms, the lawsuits are bound to proliferate. |
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The resulting piano duos are effective, referencing their sources but with a new, complex postmodern voice that moves in untraditional harmonies and rhythms. |
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As the tambour was a spurned instrument, only the triangle could bring a strong support destined to accentuate the rhythms of the accordion dance. |
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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 group will perform music from the new album, United We Stand, a flavoured sound that ranges in style from rumba to classic adaptations of old mbira rhythms. |
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Underpinning every song are melodic rhythms typical of Malian music. |
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Gone are the grimy beats, the sarcastic vocals and nonsensical lyricism, replaced by inspiring rhythms and lyrics laced with celebration and regret. |
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Here, the international public gathered for a happy hour on the beach every evening to enjoy the sunset accompanied by hot rhythms and cold drinks. |
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Escape rhythms are the result of spontaneous activity from a subsidiary pacemaker, located in the atria, atrioventricular junction, or ventricles. |
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Woven from copper and lead strips, two new works, constructed as grids, swollen with empty pregnancies, provide a text, censoring itself, in rhythms of weft and warp. |
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And it is a frequently surprising collection of records, all of which incorporate African rhythms, instruments and lyrics, into a broad spectrum of chill-out influences. |
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The play's chorus employs movement and primal rhythms, and performs a powerful ritual ceremony to bless Yerma's fertility, with Kevin MacDonnell as its tribal leader. |
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In translating the odes, for example, I kept to their syllabic count and tried to engender rhythms akin to but not identical with those engendered by alcaics in German. |
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But a couple of months ago, in a Times Square studio, congas were pounding out Afro-Cuban rhythms and dancers in high heels were twirling to fast-paced mambos. |
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Bright electric light can shift your circadian rhythms, as your body clock is called, according to a 2001 study published in the Journal of Investigative Medicine. |
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You could book her for a dinner party, for example, so instead of playing a record, Isabelle would sing and play minimal punk with dancey rhythms, with a synth and a beatbox. |
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The floorboards of the Linenhall hall gently rocked as the both the audience and musicians tapped the various rhythms of jigs, reels, polkas, to name but a few! |
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Where an aspect of the environment is highly predictable, very accurate anticipation can be achieved by endogenous rhythms or by simple kineses and taxes. |
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A 10-track sound collage of ambient world beats and rhythms dominate this second installment that focuses on the ancient traditions of Indian and Pakistani music. |
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Never one to shy away from diversity, Watanabe has blended straight jazz with bebop, Latin and even African rhythms in order to create some truly unique sounds. |
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The outer movements are both jazzy, with ostinati and motivic development in the first and brighter pizzicato textures and dance-like rhythms in the finale. |
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Stuff yourself while live dancers strut their stuff to Brazillian rhythms. |
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The rarely heard Hussite overture opens the programme, a powerful piece laced with Bohemian rhythms and melodies, taking its name from the Hussite warriors of Czech folklore. |
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The Nevilles' music, inspired by the ancestral rhythms of their city, is mostly pop, funk, and soul. |
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As well, we need to re-think our understanding of time, as the limitations of the nation state as an organizing frame blind us to different temporal rhythms. |
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The North Queensland based group are a newly-formed but very professional outfit who fuse elements of funk and reggae with hip hop and groovy rhythms. |
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Strings add color, providing the staccato rhythms of the bridge. |
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Breaking all the rules of public dancing, the waltz scandalised polite society with its racy rhythms, generating a social revolution along the way. |
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You may need to speak Bulgarian to get the words, but Dimcheva's soaring vocal and the exotic interlocking rhythms of the instruments speak volumes on their own. |
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The rhythms of traditional bhangra music are heard at clubs. |
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The latter is known as a photoreceptor, for example, for phototropism, stomatal aperture and entrainment of endogenous rhythms in plants and animals. |
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The rapidly changing length of day around the equinoxes might disturb the circadian and sleep-wake rhythms and change mood and activity in vulnerable individuals. |
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They wandered through the maze of trendy clothes stalls where the beats of a hundred ghetto blasters merged into a cacophony of competing rhythms. |
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The sampling and contorted rhythms really add a lot to many of the songs. |
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He is reserved when saying this, his Brooklyn accent influenced by the rhythms of the Caribbean of St. Vincent. |
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The breakbeats and two-step rhythms are mashed up with all sorts of other influences to create something that this jaded set of ears hasn't really heard before. |
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The set successfully employs many native elements including a pentatonic scale, dotted rhythms prominent in traditional Korean music and references to folk songs. |
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For me, the big thing was I had to unhear the rhythms in my head of the way everybody else had done it. |
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There's a punkish energy and wit to this quartet, as the drummer and leader Seb Rochford propels his two-saxophone front line with a mix of rock rhythms and breakbeats. |
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Zumba is a one-of-a-kind exercise program that pairs Latin rhythms with red-hot international dance steps so you can have a blast as you party your way into shape. |
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But few acknowledge that zydeco is already a hybrid, incorporating Afro-Caribbean rhythms with rock, blues, the Cajun music of the Creoles' white neighbours, and soul. |
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We wanted to find melodies and rhythms that retained the heaviness and distortion of hard rock, while leaving space for melodic sensitivity and complex time signatures. |
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The dolphins made it to the beach and the capitulators made it into deep water with minimal disturbance to the circadian rhythms of the seafront dwellers. |
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It was a conscious construction, an amalgam of Middle Eastern melismata and rhythms, Renaissance modality, and, oddly enough, Baroque counterpoint. |
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Go with the to and fro flow through the rhythms of urbanity, through the too-human rhythms of love and loss, through the rhythms of responsible affirmation or negation. |
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She lazily dilutes her dotted rhythms in the song into triplets. |
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Additionally, spontaneous rhythms, sustained bigeminies, paroxysmal tachycardias and other tachyarrhythmias were also observed in the different experiment. |
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Anthems written for the Chapel Royal at this time make much use of jaunty dotted rhythms in triple time, with accompaniments, ritornellos, and overtures for violins. |
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Calypso and soca music sway the body of festive dancers to a mixture of Afro-Caribbean rhythms with witty lyrics and heavy metal or finely tuned steel drums. |
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Veronica, who lives in Watchfield, is hoping to organise a concert called Carnival Messiah, which is based on Handel's Messiah but with West Indian rhythms. |
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The record spins slowly, wobbling on the turntable, emitting crackly waves of virtually unrecognizable music, the melodies inalterably splintered and the rhythms disrupted. |
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Just a handful of black licorice on a regular basis can reduce the amount of potassium in the body and may lead to fluid retention, not to mention irregular heart rhythms. |
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The steady, entrancing rhythms are a well-established motif in dramatizations of the American war in Vietnam. |
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Attracted by the smooth flow and formal consistency of Arabic metrical verse, Hebrew poets adopted its rhythmical patterns, and some tunes also acquired measured rhythms. |
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Harmonies come courtesy of three male singers while the percussion, bass and drums ensure the sound is wrapped in the rhythms of their Guinean ancestors. |
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The rhythms and basslines are smooth and inventive, never cliched. |
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There are a wide array of xylophone-like keyed instruments, which provide the distinctive metallic rhythms and shimmering melodies that are the foundation of gamelan music. |
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Unstintingly melodic, he wrote in long, arching lines that contradicted the jagged, urban rhythms of Copland and Bernstein, his close contemporaries. |
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The band's debut album won overwhelming critical acclaim, with fans swooning at their lysergic mixture of psychedelic textures and motorik rhythms. |
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Jerky rhythms that do nothing more than prove these simians can count to five instead of four are used, overused and abused on each and every song. |
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For example, the question of time rhythms in human beings as biological organisms impinges directly on the question of the possibility of an internal biological clock. |
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Schumann wrote that the poetry of Adam Mickiewicz gave Chopin the rhythms for parts of his ballades, although I don't know if anyone can really say exactly which poems. |
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