Laxman is a hesitant starter but a quick flurry of wristy strokes changed the tempo of the innings. |
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It is wholly to Solomon's honour that even in the mad tempo that he chose, he managed to play it truly impeccably and encore it later. |
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To sustain operational tempo in the near term, spare parts are cannibalized from working equipment. |
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The formal structure and brisk tempo of the third movement required almost clockwork precision. |
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Students can slow down the tempo or loop a particular section of music to practice difficult passages. |
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You can't be pogoing and winding up the audience fronting a down tempo outfit. |
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They have since reprised this song with a more intense tempo to bring a more rocking sound. |
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Missing tempo markings may have led Bernstein to perform contrasting sections more slowly than Ives wished. |
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The tempo markings also use descriptive words, with a specific metronome marking given for each piece. |
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Pakistan lifted the tempo a notch after yesterday's match but lacked striking power in the circle in the first half. |
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He is less free with tempo than other conductors are, less willing to use rubato to follow the inflections of the text. |
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All the cuts, all the ski strokes, all the movements are synchronized with the tempo of the sound. |
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Emotive riffs, inventive chords, anthemic vocals, and tempo changes combine for a truly great, epic song. |
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We have analyzed the music and made our decisions about tempo and rubato, phrasing and articulation, voicing and dynamics. |
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These many editorial changes include alterations in dynamic contrasts, tempo indications and rhythm. |
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The band's natural rhythm and fast tempo is likely also at the heart of its loyal following. |
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His lyrical talents are no less impressive than his mood swings, showing variation in meter, tempo and vocal tone. |
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They strutted and swaggered in Creolestyle, played the hottest of jazz and slowed to a dead march as the tempo changed. |
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By the time it found mass success, it was already slowing down to the swaying tempo of rocksteady and soon after that, reggae. |
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It is an honest-to-God piece of calypso music, the tempo resolutely upbeat and the mood positively festive after the first couple of tracks. |
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The tempo of the game was at the highest point as both teams threw everything into the game with so much at stake. |
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Becalmed sounds of electric piano, bass, acoustic guitars, and soft trumpet tones appear at a tempo that's so relaxed it's almost asleep. |
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The current operational tempo will continue to attrit units as they come off of their mobilization, at increasingly high numbers. |
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He gives us few tempo indications, but gives us repeats that we can arbitrarily take or not. |
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He began tapping a tempo out on the woodblock and nodded his head to the tune. |
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Because its tempo is that of a sarabande, it actually is much less difficult than most performers think. |
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In misinterpreting the half-note pulse, the performance tempo was bound to be twice as slow as it was meant to be. |
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My whole body gets into the rhythm and tempo of the motion I'm going to use. |
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The team is dictating the tempo and enjoying success in every aspect of its offense. |
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With an intro that's absolute insane scratch work, Flow maintains a feverish and surprisingly melodic tempo throughout the set. |
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Precise information about tempo measurement before Beethoven's time is scarce. |
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Jake then turned his concentration back to preparing for his own race as he stretched and then picked up the tempo with some striders. |
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She manages beautifully subtle shifts in tempo without crossing over into the soupy, and she applies a large palette of tonal color tastefully. |
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You need excellent guard play and to be methodical in approach, concerned with tempo and getting it down to a possession game. |
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That is hard to keep that tempo of operation up, even for a real professional. |
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It is best sung as a processional or the final hymn in the service. Sing at a moderate tempo. |
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I laughed as we continued to dance, our tempo speeding up more as we went along. |
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Chocolate Girl's main mix will get you shaking and the mid tempo rhythm is quite enjoyable. |
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Praise must go to the four-man rhythm section who power the album's mostly mid tempo grooves. |
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This album dishes up a balanced diet of mid tempo cruising in-your-car joints, alongside those dangerously suave, seductive ballads. |
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The pianist augments many of these mid tempo pieces with lilting harmonics, a deft right hand, and well-placed chord clusters. |
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The key is to choose a weight with which you're able to control the tempo and range of motion. |
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The senior band of 35 plays a wide range of music from the golden age of swing to more up tempo and funky numbers. |
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First, it is the most difficult stroke to swim correctly because it is based on tempo and rhythm. |
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The closing moments bring tempo shifts and multi-tracked vocals, as Reece delves into a stream-of-consciousness rant. |
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While increasing the tempo in your step class may augment intensity, it can also increase the risk of injury. |
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I wanted to do everything at a slow tempo as I knew it is critical to having a solid slice at the ball. |
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Yes, definitely, we started the game with a good tempo and created a number of chances. |
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You are used to dominating a race, increasing and decreasing the tempo when you like. |
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Once you have control of the ball with your left hand, increase your tempo as you make the first dribble. |
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But within minutes of the restart, all the tension and tetchiness vanished as both sides began to pick up the tempo and forage forward at will. |
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Demidenko fusses around with agogics and tempo fluctuation to the point where the music's unity and cumulative power fall by the wayside. |
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They change pitch, alter tempo, or otherwise reshape and transform themselves to correspond to the surrounding sounds. |
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His spacious tempo and the rich, focused tone of the violins found the deep Russian melancholy that permeates the Adagio cantabile. |
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Elliott's thematic gear shifting and tempo changing make the album's separation into eight tracks largely beside the point. |
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She batters her tom-toms at a tempo either ahead of or behind the guitars and vocals. |
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At its worst it lapses into bland mid tempo pop that a band as gifted as this really shouldn't be churning out. |
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The tempo of the game dropped as a result and Shelbourne grew more comfortable by the minute. |
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There are examples of opponents who achieved equally dramatic successes by protracting or slowing the operational tempo. |
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The unrushed tempo of the toccata-like Vivace final movement allowed Ohlsson to tap into the deep well of sound few pianists are able to access. |
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Every once in a while, usually for pickup notes, the tempo is either faster or slower than the rest of the piece. |
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The only questionable tempo is the slow one that he chooses for the cabaletta of the opera's Act Two aria. |
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The Seventh begins with a quicker tempo in the introduction as is becoming common these days. |
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Yet their forwards finally found a bit of tempo and Rory Lawson began to make linkages which had hitherto been absent. |
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Equally out of form Aston Villa travel to cup specialists Sheffield United for what is sure to be a high tempo, passionate affair. |
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The game had started off slowly and cautiously but it did not take long to find its tempo. |
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They strutted and swaggered in Creole style, played the hottest of jazz and slowed to a dead march as the tempo changed. |
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He's enabling the Bears to control the ball and dictate the tempo of games. |
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On the political front, events have also increased tempo on a positive note. |
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The melody and tempo alternated between rousing Dixieland and classic blues. |
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Gradually strings encroach, playing at a different tempo and seemingly to a different tune. |
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The conductor led his musicians fearlessly through the complicated tempo changes. |
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Director and writer are reprimanded for story decisions that slowed the pacing and tempo of the film fatally. |
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The last song of the night was a loud one, complete with a fast tempo and pounding percussion. |
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They all have that easy-rolling swing tempo that is the hallmark of early marabi jazz and penny-whistle jive. |
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It was hot, sticky day in the French capital and the match began with the stately tempo of a grandfather clock's pendulum. |
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The key to good tempo is to keep the club speed the same during the backswing and the downswing. |
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On the way to the golf course, my friend incidentally told me that public enemy number one for golfers is none other than the presto tempo. |
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Given the ludicrously slow tempo and poor pedaling he imposes throughout, he is not even remotely up to the work's complex technical demands. |
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But City had set the tempo and Jacobs waltzed his way around Antony Kay only to see Windass put the header in the TL Dallas Stand. |
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We played at a higher tempo than of late and we showed the aggression and the determination we have been lacking in recent games. |
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They upped the tempo somewhat but were guilty of ballooning some bad balls wide of their intended mark. |
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The saxophone also captures a great pitch and tempo that blends well with the slightly electronic sounding keyboards. |
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When he spoke of the tempo of operations, he said the sealift capability was critical to their success over the airlift. |
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Play upbeat music with a fast tempo during the warm-up to motivate students to move quickly and energetically. |
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The dramatic change in tempo and mindset required to properly conduct this transition should not be quickly dismissed. |
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In short, if you're a fan of the series to date, this volume delivers more of the same, advances the overall plot, and ratchets up the tempo a notch. |
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Klug plays with great tempo and limberness – evidenced by his seven sacks in a backup role last season. |
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Furiant: A vigorous Czech dance characterized by its lively rhythm and sudden changes of tempo and mood, and from duple to triple time. |
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The Transport track is used for automating tempo and time signature changes, but will not be covered in this tutorial. |
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The tempo of the game is different, in Italy it is a lot softer, in England it is more physical and fast. |
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She saw herself as the custodian of the government's covenant, direction, tempo and temper – its quality controller, as well as leader. |
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Having said that, we cannot realistically expect the Canadian Forces to maintain this high operational tempo at their current capacity. |
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The net effect of our high operational tempo and their asymmetric tactics has been an upsurge in violence. |
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There are no scientifically substantiated researches into the link between consumption of such beer and the tempo of ageing. |
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This said, however, the tempo of this economic transition should be such as to avoid loss of capital and social hardship. |
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The tempo of the work varies in response to evolving government priorities as well as changing national and international developments. |
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Yet in the countries of the East the tempo of development will by all indications be even more rapid. |
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Although the Service was given no new legal authorities, the tempo of activity in many operational areas has risen-in some cases significantly. |
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The most overt manifestation of this accelerated tempo of change is the constant shifting of the fashionable silhouette of women's dress. |
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He also creates a rubato feel, carefully notated by his tempo indications. |
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For the mambo, cha-cha, merengue, and the traditional rhythmic dance the son, each dancer moved vigorously yet effortlessly, even as the tempo changed. |
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I tend to like dramatic music with contrasts in tempo and instrumentation. |
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The novel's leisurely pace picks up tempo and tension towards the middle. |
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He wants to maintain the tempo of his activities at a high level. |
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He was dictating the pace and tempo of the fight in these rounds. |
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Had I been allowed to up the tempo it might have been a different result. |
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It's a creepy little dance, with the tempo constantly changing. |
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You can also change volume and reverb levels on each track, adjust resonance and center frequency of a simple bandpass filter, and change pitch and tempo globally. |
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We can't have one official in a skybox controlling the tempo of a game. |
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Such was the tempo of the game that there were handbags at dawn with no fewer than 12 players involved and also the dismissal of one Ashford player. |
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Both sides should take credit for a competitive and high tempo game with plenty of good passing and movement on a surface freshened by light rain. |
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As an urban design gesture it works as large, slow tempo pedal notes, allowing the refurbished stables to act as an conic flourish on Macquarie Street. |
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But the rather coy hopping between engaging, raw-chord punchiness with its electric hard-boppish theme and tempo changes that dilute the impact is mildly irritating. |
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The CD kicks off with a bunch of drum and bass, which is fair enough by me, but then switches to a slower tempo by changing from 45 to 33 on the turntable. |
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Rather it is the time to increase the size and tempo of guerrilla attacks even through the coming, bitterly cold Afghan winter. |
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At the same time, it has escalated the tempo of aerial bombardment and resumed its scorched earth campaign against civilians. |
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Operational tempo seemed particularly laggard after major victories, when maintaining the momentum of victory would seem to have promised the greatest rewards. |
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The audio, which hijacks your cardiac tempo as only ominous electronica amped up in the dark can do, mixes recordings of two timepieces of erstwhile global authority. |
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You can really improve your tempo by practicing swinging left-handed. |
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It's not unique or massively challenging but contains all the pounding riffs, anthemic choruses and tempo changes that your average enthusiast could ever want. |
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The D major conclusion blazed forth in its full glory, brilliantly anticipated by a momentary slowing of the tempo just before the final outburst. |
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These tempo fluctuations allow students to improve their skills of listening and attending to their partner as well as demonstrate their own musical intentions. |
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Trotsky fought for a faster tempo of industrial growth in order to counter this pressure, while at the same time he rejected the conception of an economic autarky. |
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The music picked up the tempo and overhead a saxophone played sweet jazz. |
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In trying to up the tempo he then top-edged a short ball from at squareleg to be well caught for 52, and the Lions in trouble at 95 for 4 in after 27 overs. |
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As the movement progresses there is, of course, flexibility of tempo as measured against a metronome but everything seems so solid and inevitable. |
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With Bachmann hanging back, Romney seized control of the tempo in what may have been his strongest performance so far. |
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Low returns to the mid tempo rock of the title track and yet still manages to fit a percussion break into the most U2 sounding like track on the record. |
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This is consequently developed in the remainder of the exposition section and in the development where, aided by the tempo marking, it has evolved into a tremolando. |
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Taylor wasn't the only Scottish forward puffing and blowing towards the end of the game, and when it came to tempo there was only one team dictating it. |
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Initially it was a slow, sauntering pace but then she built up a good, swift tempo and I found myself humming and shaking my booty until I tripped over a magpie. |
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Both as a product and a cause of the indecisive nature of combat, the operational tempo of war-as-process generally moved at a slow and halting pace. |
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The offensive tempo of the operation would ebb and flow for the duration of the battle, changing rapidly due to the enemy's ability to use terrain to his advantage. |
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But going into the last fence Mark and Another Rum upped the tempo and at the finish the pair stormed to the line, seven lengths clear of the chasers. |
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Strings, chimes, horns, pianos and bells appear in nearly every song, no matter how fast the tempo or searing the guitars, and, most importantly, they never feel forced. |
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United, nine times winners of this competition and the red hot favourites to retain their crown again, simply couldn't live with the scorching tempo set by Rovers on the day. |
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The A minor key is well adhered to and the Un poco lento tempo is very intriguingly drawn out by Hogwood and his Danish orchestra who play this music to the manner born. |
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A good point guard knows how to control the pace or tempo of the game. |
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The music rose in a whirling crescendo as the tempo got faster. |
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The Reverend Jolly's voice was in fact not all that far from Fulton's own, but slowed to a funereal tempo and larded with the lugubriousness of a hired mourner. |
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The album differs from their earlier punchy efforts, concentrating on developing strong grooves laced in reverb and echoes at a leisurely-relaxed tempo. |
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The parade of grotesqueries viewed and heard at breakneck tempo induces a hypnotic state that some audience members may mistake for an enriching experience. |
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The busy chaos is reflected in the tempo and distorted drums. |
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When you are used to dominating a race, controlling the pace, increasing and decreasing the tempo when you like, just to sit and wait can be almost painful. |
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A team is worth its weight in gold: it reduces complexity and raises the tempo. |
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As usual, everything with Currentzis is extreme: tempo, dynamics, tone color, emotional contrast. |
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Over 300 music presets offer useful presetting from A to Z for parameters such as rhythm, tone, tempo, effects etc. Less searching, more playing! |
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At a certain tempo alpha waves are generated, which have been associated with a deep sense of concentration and focus. |
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Dance music has instantly recognizable patterns of beats built upon a characteristic tempo and measure. |
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The tempo of the piece is the speed or frequency of the tactus, a measure of how quickly the beat flows. |
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At various points in the campaign, the French were not able to achieve the same tempo as German armoured units. |
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Several options are now available to you, including the ability to repeat either or both of the envelope generators in accordance with the synchronized tempo value. |
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Follow in the footsteps of legendary stars with the CTK-7000: Over 300 music presets offering practical default settings for rhythm, tone, tempo effects and more for your favourite songs. |
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Metronome is as its name clearly states, a metronome that will help you to follow your tempo according to the most precise indications, so as to follow any music composition with the greatest accurateness. |
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Remember from the Tempo Control and Warping chapter that, although any number of warped Arrangement clips can have the Tempo Master option activated, only the bottommost, currently playing clip is the actual tempo master. |
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In these performances, however, led by the iconoclastic violinist Thomas Zehetmair, extreme contrasts of tempo and tone color bring maximum intensity to the composer's restless moods. |
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Robertson made deft prefatory remarks, asking listeners to notice a military-march tempo in the Webern and some Bud Powell-esque piano writing in the Stockhausen. |
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Puccini wrote an extended orchestral postlude — thirty bars, in slow tempo — to accompany these gestures and other mopping-up activities by the heroine. |
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The end of the song occurs when one or both singers become exhausted, or start to laugh, or are unable to follow a tempo or to initiate a new cycle of song. |
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Furthermore, the new requirements for online and in tempo judicial information and cooperation should be able to guarantee the security of Europe's citizens. |
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There's noticeable variety among the tracks in tempo and lyrics. |
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International co-ordination of the nature and tempo of reform: this is the only way to avoid an unlevel playing field and negative regulatory arbitrage. |
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It is easy to be carried along by the tempo of her prose, which alternates between short, sharp sentences and sprawling passages that leave you gasping for breath. |
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A more serious issue concerns the tempo equivalencies between duple and triple passages. |
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There is a change of tempo in the music but not the dancing between these two speeds. |
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This includes long slowdistance training, pace or tempo training, interval training, circuit training and fartlek training. |
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This renders subtleties of rubato and other tempo alterations, including ritardandos, accelerandos and fermatas, difficult to coordinate. |
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Ghettotech consists largely of four-on-the-floor dance beats at a faster tempo with lyrics that are sexually explicit and derogatory in nature. |
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Frequent tempo and time signature changes and syncopation are also typical. |
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The Scots were able to up the tempo and Serghei Lascencov, the luminous-booted Metallist Kharkov left back, became the centre of attention. |
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Five songs of spunky funkcore. Bouncy, peppy stuff with annoying tempo changes and whiny singing. |
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Their quick tempo rucking also forced Blackwood into conceding early penalties, allowing Byron Hayward to open up an early six-point lead. |
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Many times, ritardando is combined with rubato until the regular tempo is restored. |
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Richie Brittain narked the ref, narked his team-mates, narked the opposition, set the tempo and scored. |
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This tempo for sarabandes remains consistent with the range given by most dance historians. |
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Natural differences in the tempo of movements of capital and labour in the age of globalisation are leading to a spiralling drop in employment standards. |
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A general upward trend in tempo has been observed during the evolution of drum and bass. |
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The conductor unifies the orchestra, sets the tempo and shapes the sound of the ensemble. |
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The concertmaster would lead the tempo of pieces by lifting his or her bow in a rhythmic manner. |
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Perhaps never before in human history time has passed by as quickly as it passes today, and there is nothing to indicate that this tempo will slow down. |
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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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I would suggest to him that if that logic takes place, we will never be able to ask in committee a question of the Chief of the Defence Staff as to whether or not the operational tempo of our troops is being stretched. |
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It was in the inside forwards that the differences of approach were most plain, Schürrle, Hazard and Oscar scoring four times in 59 minutes and playing at a thrilling tempo throughout. |
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I think we are starting to look fitter and we have much more of the ball because we are playing with a higher tempo and that's the way the manager wants us to play. |
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Like the instruments of a symphony following the metronomic tempo of the conductor's baton, the hands of Raymond Weil's new maestro march past at full speed, with allegro vivo. |
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The faster tempo of the operations was intended to add to German difficulties in replacing tired divisions through the railway bottlenecks behind the German front. |
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The tempo of operations increased throughout the first half of May as the United Nations' attempts to mediate a peace were rejected by the Argentinians. |
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Without a band he relied on his electro-acoustic guitar and drum machine, which mostly worked when the tempo was set correctly and didn't cut out halfway through a song. |
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It has the bouncy rhythm of a charabanc, mordantly witty lyrics, and, fittingly, its tempo is perfect for gently cruising past coaches on the M6 motorway. |
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The match was started on fast tempo and players of both Khyber Student Union team and Jamrud Union provided great thrill for the sitting spectators. |
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The band uses its Latin American roots to great effect, creating a sound that combines the rhythms of early Santana with the scuzz and tempo of The Hives. |
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A keyboard player could lead the ensemble with his or her head, or by taking one of the hands off the keyboard to lead a more difficult tempo change. |
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A lutenist or theorbo player could lead by lifting the instrument neck up and down to indicate the tempo of a piece, or to lead a ritard during a cadence or ending. |
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The beats and tempo that define house are entirely different. |
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The 15 solo pieces exhibit detailed dynamics and tempo indications, as well as various performance techniques, including glissandi and chord clusters. |
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The big opening theme goes by lickety-split, and then when the second subject arrives the pianist practically stops the performance with his lingering tempo reductions. |
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A certain tempo compares to other tempi by the difference in speed, whereas a certain rhythm compares to other rhythms by the difference in structure. |
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It was an abstract race game called Tempo in which pieces were moved not by the roll of the dice, but by the playing of cards. |
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Recently, it launched a monthly section called Tempo that niftily reports on Hispanic culture in the city. |
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Tanto Tempo updates traditional bossa nova by adding subtle programmed beats, jazz flourishes and English and Brazilian vocals. |
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However ballads have been commonly deemed as the opposite of dance music in terms of their tempo. |
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Sailors often took a song from one category and, with necessary alterations to the rhythm, tempo, or form, used it for a different task. |
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Tempo changes flow gracefully from one to the next, and bright, angular guitar lines are balanced with genuine fist-pumping moments of distortion and riffage. |
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Tempo is the measure of the time between the beats, while a stride is the distance covered by all four feet within a given gait before the pattern of footfalls repeats. |
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Many communities within Leeds now have their own local radio stations, such as East Leeds FM and Tempo FM for Wetherby and the surrounding areas. |
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Two oratorios, La resurrezione and Il trionfo del tempo, were produced in a private setting for Ruspoli and Ottoboni in 1709 and 1710, respectively. |
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Tabloids in the Philippines are usually written in local languages, like Tagalog or Bisaya, but some are written in English, like the People's Journal and Tempo. |
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