The decision was made for me as the violin quartet over in one corner of the bookstore started to play something soft and melodious. |
|
The leader was swapping his violin with that of his companion on the first desk. |
|
The band handles noise best by balancing it with resolutely melodic violin and lead guitar parts. |
|
Besides, many action actors get paid by the line, so never use dialogue when a slow-motion close-up and a violin score will do the job. |
|
She brought the violin to her bosom and gave it a long hug, running her slender fingers over its strings and the smooth, polished wood. |
|
This mounts the output jack on the lower left bout of the violin with chin rest clamp hardware. |
|
This five-string instrument has a violin string length but also has an extended lower bout and deep ribs for a more viola-like tone. |
|
I can say that the engineering gives the violin and piano unwonted realism and spatial presence. |
|
The Sinfonia concertante recorded here features the violin and cello as soloists. |
|
Mozart raises the accompaniment to share some of that interest, so that the violin and the piano speak on relatively equal terms. |
|
Sensing my surprise at finding a violin amidst the gaggle of reeds and brass and bull fiddles, she offered to play me a tune. |
|
The dexterity of the violin must be imitated by the viols down below, and is so to thrilling effect. |
|
What could be a striking acoustic song is drowned in inconsequential little squiggles and unnecessary violin and clarinet noodling. |
|
The violin and piano are concertante instruments throughout and are given cadenzas near the end. |
|
Studies for solo violin include Paganini's brilliant 24 caprices, which provided a fertile source of inspiration for other composers. |
|
The musically inclined can look forward to an array of Carnatic music concerts, flute recital and a grand violin concert. |
|
Joey held the map in one hand and had his violin case gripped firmly in the other. |
|
He also shares with us that the violin he plays on this CD is a 1727 Stradivarius that once belonged to Rodolphe Kreutzer. |
|
Conklin has performed as a violin soloist with numerous orchestras including the Louisville, Nashville and Berlin Symphony Orchestras. |
|
As for the title track, why not use plucked strings, craggy violin bowing, and rumbling xylophones to gleefully pervert the title's sentiment? |
|
|
The violin sonata in F opens with an ostinato that surely outstays its welcome. |
|
At the end, the same six pitch-classes provide the concluding hexachord of the tranquil violin melody. |
|
I had initially considered violin for its options of orchestral or chamber music. |
|
I'm in a chamber orchestra playing first violin and there's this aged second violin who is just so mean to me. |
|
With the chime of the glockenspiel and the slow pull of the violin the band began and invited us to witness a cavalcade of sound and images. |
|
Something beautiful but so far away-like the music of a faraway violin or the susurration of a distant wave. |
|
In the afternoons, she taught Suzuki violin to young children, and played in the community orchestra. |
|
The first volume of the modern Suzuki school of violin and cello education for young children ends, rightly, with Bach. |
|
It's beautiful, very formal music, heavy on the violin and the glorious cimbalom. |
|
These six works, written in a year, are in a direct line from Bach's solo violin sonatas and partitas. |
|
The eclectic mix of trance, tabla and the violin euphony left the raving party animals craving for more. |
|
He wrote several violin concertos and a smaller number for wind including probably the first solo clarinet concerto. |
|
Vibraphone and bass sketch the hymnal melody, joined by lush violin figures and soft digital crackle. |
|
Sound, be it the music of a violin or the patter of rain on a rooftop, is vibrations in the air around us. |
|
Maya Homberger's phrasing on the Baroque violin is peerless, her tone warm and expressive. |
|
In the second movement, concertmaster Christopher Warren-Green's realization of the scordatura violin writing is chillingly compelling. |
|
For example, the opening violin solo puts Strauss' voiceprint on it immediately. |
|
The concertmaster played a note on his violin and Lev tuned his instrument to it. |
|
However, I saw William Preucil, as concertmaster of the Cleveland Orchestra, do a Mozart violin solo and had to pick my jaw up off the ground. |
|
In maple this is termed tiger maple, or fiddleback, because it is preferred for violin backs. |
|
|
I have a recording of a very attractive violin concerto with fiddler Louis Kaufman and Bernard Herrmann conducting. |
|
He played the fife for military assemblies and the violin for dancing parties. |
|
Joey had his violin on the floor, and he was trying to blow some dust off the fingerboard. |
|
Verily I say unto thee, practiseth your fingered octaves on ye violin and ye shall always have loads of work, even unto the end of the world. |
|
She plays the violin and has hopes of eventually attending the conservatory. |
|
Shankar learned vocals from the age of two, violin from age five and played his first concert at seven. |
|
Caleb has always had a passion for music and is learning to play the violin and bass guitar. |
|
Evora also plays the violin and performed in her high school's symphony for three years. |
|
Franz learnt to play the piano and the violin from his father and brothers, and later the viola. |
|
This is a work for violin and piano, here played by Leopold Avakian and Mitchell Andrews. |
|
They shared a love of music and they would play violin sonatas together, Einstein on the violin and Born on piano. |
|
Paddy, who is a noted musician, played a number of tunes on the violin and was in his usual good form. |
|
He plays Khachaturian's violin concerto next Friday in the opening concert of the NSO's national tour. |
|
Someone would always be practising the harpsichord or the violin and there was much reading aloud, dressing-up and play-acting. |
|
As a child, I took a few violin and piano lessons but never got past awkward plucking and plunking. |
|
The youth music festival begins with an invocatory violin concert by Malavika and Sharada, both upcoming artistes. |
|
His intense, swaggering stage presence and masterful violin playing has won him both fans and critical acclaim all over the world. |
|
I use the crossfader to blend the sound of my violin with the synths I am playing with the violin. |
|
I rushed to the orchestra room and slipped it underneath her violin in her cubby and then left to go home. |
|
There are three solo pieces and a three-part fugue for clarinet, violin and cello. |
|
|
Sound is well dampened and only the occasional flute, violin or oboe can be heard when a door is opened. |
|
Rather, my first thought is of the scene in which Tom dandles a priceless violin out the window. |
|
There he studied classical violin and became the producer for the original Fugees group. |
|
Gluck learnt to play the violin and keyboard instruments, but his later appearances as a virtuoso were on the glass harmonica. |
|
When I was younger I had had a Polish violin teacher, and she had told me a Yiddish proverb that proved to be the truth. |
|
The lyrical charm of the duet between violin and cello in the third movement has a typical arpeggio background from the piano. |
|
Dimotika are traditional rural folk songs often accompanied by a clarinet, lute, violin dulcimer, and drum. |
|
The two-stringed erhu is compared to the violin in sound and status in the music world. |
|
It is the world's largest violin playing just for the exhaustion of our natural resources. |
|
Backed by nine musicians playing double bass, cello, violin and piano, alongside guitar and drums, this album truly is something different. |
|
Built by Ken Parker, the violin covers the entire range of orchestra's double bass, cello, viola and violin. |
|
In the violin version, he writes double stops, pizzicato and tremolo indications and so forth, keeping with the capabilities of the violin. |
|
Gabriella put down her violin and danced with Stephen and Alannah in a bumping uneven jigtime. |
|
Track three features some silence, some noisy violin screeches, and what I think is a female voice wailing and breathing slowly. |
|
Mat Maneri plays some lonesome violin, letting strings weep in blank, tragic beauty, plucking and wailing and sounding like a dying dog. |
|
Peter von Winter's contribution is a Sinfonia concertante for violin, clarinet, horn, bassoon, and orchestra. |
|
Another veteran Etoiles hero, Syran Mbenza, adds in the gently rousing guitar solos, while horns, violin and accordion provide the backing. |
|
Using crocodile tears and empty promises of true love, Trudy plays Norval like a violin, suckering him into her and Emmy's sly scenario. |
|
Some of his chamber works are the eight string quartets, two piano trios, two piano quintets, a piano quartet and sonatas for violin and cello. |
|
The songs, piano accompaniment and violin part are of an easy to moderate level of difficulty. |
|
|
Then he swaps to bass guitar or acoustic, Derek comes in on violin, Basil starts to sing. |
|
Again the Chilingirian chose a very fast tempo, which required the first violin especially to be extremely adroit. |
|
Its musical range spans about four octaves, and the sound has some similarities to that of a Western violin. |
|
Another favourite for Win was a ceremony in the theme of Chicago gangsters, the men in black shirts and white ties and carrying violin cases. |
|
It's in that moment he decides he's not going to play his beloved violin until he reacquaints himself with his Algerian roots. |
|
She took out her violin case and the ream of papers that was to be her and Brian's performance for John Cawthorne's little concert. |
|
She plays the violin, viola and piano, while Antony plays the viola, cello, double bass, tuba, guitar and recorder. |
|
The school employs two music teachers, has a large school choir and offers tuition in piano, guitar, recorder, violin and flute. |
|
Every child learns to play musical instruments, the recorder in the third grade and the violin in the sixth grade. |
|
These are songs built around a yearning violin, a plucky banjo riff or an accordion sigh. |
|
She sang as a child, took classical voice lessons and played both the piano and the violin. |
|
Even when I don't want to be worrying, the anxiety is always in the background like a taut violin string. |
|
Mama, convinced she had produced a wunderkind, arranged for Cole to play piano and violin concerts in and around Peru. |
|
Courtois has an extraordinary range, pushing his instrument quite comfortably into registers normally reserved for the viola and even violin. |
|
My landlady, Ita, needs this week's rent, or she will start practising the violin again. |
|
The distinction between the solo violin and the ripieno violins is also reduced as there is much less tonal distinction between them. |
|
Putting his music in his folder, Sean carried that and his violin to her at her place on the apron of the stage. |
|
Christie provides rock-solid support for Kurosaki's violin, and the music's harmonic foundation is never in question. |
|
In other words, the blues is about having lived whereas the violin draws heavily on a technical ability that can be gained in a practice room. |
|
All the songs are folk-like in character, arranged for voice and piano with an optional violin part printed separately. |
|
|
I watched him loosen his collar, and walk over to a stool where his violin case was, open. |
|
Inside he found five masterpieces, but it was the contents of the last violin case that took his breath away. |
|
I played using more of the lower register, which is totally DA BOMB on my violin, and I really need to do that more often. |
|
Three of the most popular instruments are the two-string violin, the lute, and the pipa. |
|
Of course, this is not the whole story about why the violin takes such a lot of practice in order to learn to play it well. |
|
From the tanpura to the violin all those who chance to visit Dakshinachitra then, can touch, feel and try playing some of them. |
|
Participants should come with a prepared piece of baroque solo violin music. |
|
A servant eased out of a small door with a four-string violin and began to saw quietly at it. |
|
Scott is also an accomplished musician, playing the saxophone and winning two gold medals in violin. |
|
One of the most difficult passages for the violin in the first movement is a melodic minor one-octave scale in fingered octaves. |
|
Each time the manakin produced a loud, clear tone that sounded as if it came from a violin. |
|
The dedication required to master a stringed instrument such as the cello or violin is no small consideration. |
|
For me, the violin and the cello sonatas share many of the glories of that cycle. |
|
An acoustic guitar, an occasional banjo, a cello, a violin are all elements found at the core of The Books' music. |
|
The first violin, viola, and cello played the Viennesse chamber music section with warmth and stylish schmaltz. |
|
Very early on, Dunov manifested a great love for music and played the violin. |
|
The Octet is scored for flute, clarinet, French horn, violin, viola, cello, double bass, and piano. |
|
This is only natural, since many of the kids own a bandore or violin that they've built with their own hands. |
|
The reason was that he was extremely musical and showed great talent for the violin. |
|
Here is a picture of James aged six, clearly more interested in the violin bow than in the dance. |
|
|
Tenenbaum, who just happened to have her violin, lifted her bow and began to play. |
|
When the electric is used, it's played with a violin bow, which results in a sound I'm sure we could use to communicate with whales. |
|
The stealer of the show was definitely Peers when he played his guitar like an upside-down guitar with a violin bow. |
|
A typical Baroque violin or viol bow had a finely tapered snakewood stick, almost straight or slightly curved outwards. |
|
And we often set them swaying back and forth with an accidental whack of a violin bow. |
|
I seem to remember that although I couldn't play a note on the violin with the bow, I wasn't too bad at pizzicato. |
|
She played second violin in a philharmonic orchestra that happened to be visiting my town. |
|
The first movement explores the melodic and structural implications of the minor third, much like the first movement of Adams's violin concerto. |
|
My father believed there would be more openings for a violin player in an orchestra because the string section was bigger than any other. |
|
I heard the first few measures of Mozart's third violin concerto in my head set to the rhythm of the crude chant. |
|
Our sound features sax, clarinet, violin, synthesiser, guitar, bass, drums and four vocalists. |
|
Although most commonly taught to violin players, the method can also be used with instruments such as viola, cello, flute, bass and guitar. |
|
It ends with the title theme given an almost threnodic treatment, as a solo violin bridges the orchestral passages. |
|
Strenuous fireworks, hoarse violin figures and a quietly threnodic contemplation are all there. |
|
A lonely violin and piano play out the final three minutes of the record, augmented by a lazy bass drum. |
|
To best suit the cello, he has selectively added or omitted material from the violin edition. |
|
Some may know that I will admit to having had a violin in my possession in a previous existence. |
|
The vibraphone offers a misty rendition of the melody after the accordion, followed by a guitar section senza battuta, and then violin a battuta. |
|
As I put it, the violin emerges from the orchestral fabric and soars into the stratosphere. |
|
No more gilt harpsichords or violin serenades played to me from outside my bedroom window. |
|
|
His seventh and eighth symphonies get an occasional airing, as do the serenade for strings and the robust violin concerto. |
|
He's going to opium dens where he's part of a gang as a hired assassin who carries a tommy gun in a violin case. |
|
The bridge transmits the strings' vibrations to the violin belly, or soundboard, which amplifies the sound. |
|
All that was missing from the scene were a couple of pin-striped toughies carrying violin cases. |
|
It's a disc of the year without a shadow of a doubt, but more than that, I think it's one of the best violin records I've ever heard. |
|
Bach's most famous organ work, the Toccata and Fugue in D minor, was transcribed for violin by Bruce Fox-Lefriche. |
|
They also transcribed music for the instrument from many sources, most notably the harpsichord, violin and piano. |
|
The water wave, like the violin string, is an example of a transverse wave. |
|
While Simon the cute, violin playing, trilingual young lad is pretty good, his two red-haired cousins are contrived and mostly painful. |
|
He had formed a violin trio with his two brothers after giving up a career in medicine for music. |
|
This reminds me very strongly of the energetic string crossing in the op. trio sonatas of Buxtehude for violin, viola da gamba and continuo. |
|
With the cello suites and the solo violin sonatas and partitas, they form a triptych of Bach at his most concentrated and intimate. |
|
Maazel has previously written a pleasant violin concerto and an orchestral triptych. |
|
My mother played some piano and my father was able to play violin, some piano, saxophone, clarinet, trumpet and trombone. |
|
Children also get to learn the saxophone, clarinet, trumpet, trombone, guitar, violin, and drums, among other things. |
|
The sound of fins slapping against the water can be just as terrifying as low-pitched violin notes. |
|
The swooping vocal modulations suggest North Africa, while a violin hints at East European klezmer. |
|
She plays the violin, viola and piano, while Antonin plays the viola, cello, double bass, tuba, guitar and recorder. |
|
She stood and tuned her violin for a few moments, and then opened the music to the Tchaikovsky concerto. |
|
I grabbed his violin and bladed over to the counter where they were more than happy to keep it safe for the time being. |
|
|
Miranda leaped and ran, spun and twirled, flew and soared to the sound of Mario's violin. |
|
Tony Conrad violin drones return on the sixth track, working amid electronic bleeps and squeaks which come to dominate the proceedings. |
|
A music stand rested in the third corner with a flute and violin on stands nearby. |
|
At some time in their lives, they've played the piano, flute, clarinet, violin and cello and sung in choirs. |
|
Dad tunes the Kingswood once a month like a classical musician would tune his violin, and the engine sings. |
|
Through the wall he was continually listening to the Bach G minor unaccompanied violin sonata. |
|
Bach is believed to have commenced writing the Sonatas and Partitas for unaccompanied violin shortly thereafter. |
|
A lone violin could be heard, reaching the point of emotional unbearableness with mournful vibratoes and sorrowful strokes. |
|
Two legendary masters, one of the sitar the other of the violin, get together for one thought-provoking session. |
|
Bruch's violin concerto was on, and it took me the entire first movement to assemble the thing. |
|
From vocal music to violin, tabla to mridangam, flute to the rarely learnt harmonium, the school is out to find music in everyone. |
|
They will be accompanied by Kumbakonam Padmanabhan on the mridangam and K.L.N Shastry on the violin. |
|
Many young South Indians are adept at Carnatic music and can accompany even professional musicians on the mridangam, the ghatam or the violin. |
|
He asked me with an impolite, almost impatient lilt, as he slackly sat himself upon a tree-stump, violin in hand, hand upon knee. |
|
Together with Ignacio Berroa on drums and Federico Britos on violin, they round out a lineup perfectly suited to the subtle bolero. |
|
There was even a music stand in the corner and a shelf for my violin right next to it. |
|
Later in Europe bones provided the rhythm to jigs and reels normally played on violin. |
|
The woman who played an omnipotent American president like her personal violin. |
|
In the same way that a child's first week of violin lessons sends the family running for earplugs, so may the spiny lobster keep predators at bay, biologists say. |
|
Contrary to popular belief his op. 5 sonatas are not solo works but duos for violin and violone, which, like the opp. 2 and 4 dance suites, require no keyboard accompaniment. |
|
|
The compositions on his six CDs feature sitar, flute, clarinet, soprano sax, violin viola, violoncello, contrabass, percussion and electronic devices as well as solo guitar. |
|
The viol, a family of string instruments that was predominant prior to the advent of the violin family, has a singing if somewhat fragile tone that instantly seduces. |
|
They take centre stage among a small eclectic ensemble of instruments, including two Hammond organs, electrically amplified violin and vibraphones. |
|
The Five Songs Without Words that follow were later transcribed for violin and piano and in that guise they have been heard far more often than in vocal form. |
|
He also taught us in standard 5, and one of the penalties of being kept in after classes ended was having to listen to him giving violin lessons to unmusical pupils. |
|
It's a strange, Verve-like moment of violin tremolo and stylized country made all the stranger by Toomey's lyrics, unrhymed, articulate and serious. |
|
While another strong contender for best track on the album is Black Mountain, a haunting ballad built around a strong acoustic guitar riff and some heady stabs of violin. |
|
Yet this Saturday night I had the privilege of being present when Suzie McNeil, backed only by drums, bass violin and a lonely electro-acoustic guitar, gave in to the crowd. |
|
The special live feature for her Opera House performance was the inclusion of a violin and cello accompaniment to Orton's sweet and distinctive voice. |
|
Two of the gardens, planted with flowers and shrubs that attract butterflies and birds, are whimsically designed in the shape of a violin and two eighth notes. |
|
She gently placed the bow on the violin and very carefully began to play. |
|
Kasia is a wonderful musician and plays the violin with great dexterity. |
|
In the fourth movement the pizzicato sforzandos were very accurate, loud, and pleasing to hear, as was the high playing of the first violin in the Presto. |
|
You see, when you have duos for violin and piano, clarinet and piano, or even a string quartet, there is usually one person who has the final decision. |
|
The core group plays the first three items, Antheil's second violin sonata, three preludes for piano by Gordon Rumson, and Takemitsu's piano trio, Between Tides. |
|
One hat in the Press Room is designed from black velvet with a violin perched on top of a skull cap. |
|
Between bouts of running a portable bandsaw mill and helping local people and businesses with computer problems, he tries to find time to play the violin and cello. |
|
The performance is weightily beautiful, even though it can't disguise the fact that this is essentially a piano solo with violin and cello accompaniment. |
|
Since then, Hoffman has mastered the acoustic guitar, bass, violin, piano, keyboards, djembe, rain stick and a voice that sends tingles up the spine of anyone hearing it. |
|
It will feature a true English consort of flute, violin, viols, cittern, lute, bandore and voices performing music by William Byrd, Thomas Morley, John Dowland and others. |
|
|
This collection of Italian waltzes, polkas, mazurkas and tarantellas for solo violin is an excellent teaching tool for double stops, scales, arpeggios and style. |
|
Of all the carving operations associated with stringed musical instruments carving the scroll of violin family instruments seems to be one of the most difficult to grasp. |
|
I curtsied and he bowed, and we started waltzing to the violin music. |
|
Before she was grown, she would take up flute, violin, ballet, ice-skating, tap dance and French, and she would skip the first and seventh grades. |
|
The orchestra follows with a suggestion of the Dies Irae in the tympani as the music reaches a climax that is followed by the quiet, concluding statement of the solo violin. |
|
She began playing contradances while in high school, went on to Eastman School of Music, and now performs and teaches fiddle and violin in the Rochester area. |
|
In a way it was a cross between a lyre, violin and a guitar. |
|
He was also the first Bolognese composer to publish solo violin sonatas. |
|
Holmes did play the violin, but also smoked a pipe, boxed, injected cocaine, and lost himself in his chemistry lab. |
|
Fong's violin gradually assumes more control over the quartet, leading it into imitation, sparking its tempo, and supplying high-pitched notes in dissonant tutti chords. |
|
Once open she proceeds to pull out the violin and rosin her bow. |
|
One of the commonest consorts in the Elizabethan period was the combination of treble viol or violin, flute or recorder, bass viol, lute, cittern, and bandora. |
|
The pianists, one German, the other Lithuanian, take turn and turn about, and the first five works alternate between violin and piano and piano trio. |
|
The key to understanding Riemann's ideas is to explore why a tuning fork, a violin and a clarinet sound very different, even when they are all playing an A, say. |
|
A full-fledged live orchestra from the triangle area consisting of accomplished musicians on the mridangam, veena, flute, violin and vocal accompanied the dancers. |
|
Unfortunately, its excellent concertmaster and first violinist, Guillermo Figueroa, may be leaving, so the season became one long audition of violin soloists. |
|
The lyrical second theme brings forth a singing legato from the violin that contrasts wonderfully with its sharp and clipped phrasing in the first section. |
|
She has as much chance of fixing it as a gorilla has of tuning a violin. |
|
Glenn Basham is associate professor of violin at the University of Miami, first violinist with the Bergonzi String Quartet and concertmaster of the Naples Philharmonic. |
|
The wedding cake, with chocolate covered strawberries between the layers, was decorated with treble clefs for Rachel's violin and alto clefs for Nick's viola. |
|
|
The cor anglais and violin obbligato in the duet for male alto and tenor, Wie selig, with its thirds and lyrical highlights was particularly effective. |
|
Wally Pratt was a skinny, kind of dorky kid who wore bowties and played the violin. |
|
In addition there is a large body of secular work for diverse instrumental forces, such as the Brandenburg Concertos, orchestral suites, violin and clavier concertos, etc. |
|
New instruments that appeared during the early Renaissance, in the second half of the 15th century, included the harpsichord, the clavichord, and the viol and violin families. |
|
He gently laid the violin back into its case and locked it shut, handing it to one of the band members to put in the back for safe keeping until he was ready leave. |
|
Apart from the organ, the only other instrument is a bass violin. |
|
The music will be performed live on stage in a band that includes bass, violin, electric guitar and stranger instruments like the recorder and pots and pans. |
|
They might choose to play the guitar, recorder, saxophone, harp, drum, xylophone, violin, piano, banjo, symbols or the triangle or any other instrument of varied origins. |
|
This disc contains his complete works for unaccompanied violin and viola, and also his complete published works for those instruments accompanied. |
|
He became a pupil of the cathedral organist, who gave him a thorough training as a composer and as a performer on keyed instruments, the oboe and the violin. |
|
She's a strange one alright, a former New York street artist who discovered the baritone ukelele, remembered her old violin lessons, and cut an album, No Guts, No Gravy. |
|
A key change to D major heralds solo passages for wind and piano, the Stravinskian texture of which is accentuated by the accompanying violin harmonics. |
|
Can anyone play Paganini's violin caprices and do them justice? |
|
He is an extremely prolific composer whose output also includes some five symphonies, violin concertos, cello concertos, chamber music and vocal oeuvres. |
|
The vocals are supported by guitar, violin and keyboard and, of course, the occasional handclaps, providing an up-beat, cheery backing to the shopping of Argos customers. |
|
Legend has it that he tried to hide his pugilistic ambitions from his mother by carrying his boxing gloves inside his violin case. |
|
Other Celtic words for violin also have meanings referring to rounded appearances. |
|
Since that piece is flat, unbraced, and usually made of soft wood, it is much weaker than the belly of a violin. |
|
The violin maker Antonio Stradivari produced his instruments during the Little Ice Age. |
|
Italians invented many of the musical instruments, including the piano and violin. |
|
|
The tail hair of horses can be used for making bows for string instruments such as the violin, viola, cello, and double bass. |
|
Zwingli enjoyed music and could play several instruments, including the violin, harp, flute, dulcimer and hunting horn. |
|
The effort absorbed all his spare time and money, including that which he earned by playing the violin at the Bolton theatre. |
|
Harris' accompanists included Paul Beaudry on bass, Alan Grubner on violin and Dan Kaufman on keyboard. |
|
The world's smallest violin playing hearts and flowers for every sweetheart of the Midwest who didn't make it in Hollywood. |
|
This year's finalists play violin, cello, oboe, clarinet, flute, baritone horn, harp, piano or guitar. |
|
Some of the lyrical passages are so glorious that you want to weep, and there's an exquisitely beautiful violin solo in the Benedictus. |
|
Few, if any, instruments by the great violin makers of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries survive in anything like their original state. |
|
Chinchiv musicians combine with Peruvian cajon, guiro, jawbone, bongos, conga, Andean violin and guitar. |
|
Antonio Stradivari is universally recognized as one of the most famous violin makers in the world. |
|
With its banjo-plucking effects, bitonality and sleazy violin portamentos sounding as weird as Charles Ives in a smoke-filled speakeasy. |
|
As we control for maker in the hedonic regressions, we only included violin makers that had at least two observations in our dataset. |
|
When the solo violin sizzles through a glissando, a dancer spins through a series of barrel turns. |
|
He combines the lyrical strains of Indian instruments like the flute, violin and tabla with western progressive rock. |
|
Thought to date from around 1720, the violin sonatas and partitas took the instrument beyond its known limits. |
|
The Suites are Bach's only work for unaccompanied cello, a masterpiece companion to his sonatas and partitas for solo violin. |
|
I love a violin, Uilleann pipes, a tin whistle, a guitar and an aul squeeze box, just not all at the same time. |
|
Strings abound, with Greg Leisz playing a variety of lap and pedal steel guitars, while Jenny Scheinman bows richly amplified violin. |
|
Reeve's sorrowful violin was the perfect accompaniment to Moffat's brooding vocals on Shy Retirer. |
|
The concertmaster tunes his or her violin to this baseline and then retunes the entire orchestra. |
|
|
The Democrats will emphasize the violin stories, and they will exist, too. |
|
Solo violin and viola delivered the final lively Rigaudon with panache and verve. |
|
For the Purcell Quartet he also plays cello and bass violin and has recorded over 30 albums with them. |
|
If a stellar-mass black hole is a violin, an IMBH is a double bass. |
|
Yes, she moves through the entire saxophonic family, but she also plays flutes, clarinet, violin, viola, melodica and penny whistle. |
|
The performers, mainly the gypsy, or the Roma, play traditional gypsy tunes and Hungarian folk songs on the violin, contra-bass and cimbalom. |
|
The orchestra's concertmaster, Yasser El Serafi, then took the stage for the Tchaikovsky violin concerto. |
|
The insistent tune that runs through the concluding vivace non troppo is delimited by a dialogue between staccato violin and sonorous cello. |
|
She virtually ate with gusto just about every bar of Tchaikovsky's violin concerto in D major, lacing it with a piquant, gipsyish air. |
|
Bach, works by Michael Praetorius and William Brade, and early canzonas and sonatas for violin and sackbut by Dario Castello and Giulio Belli. |
|
Foucher worked as an apprentice with a violin maker in Nelson and the experience inspired his business. |
|
Most homes were built by their owners who include stone builders, crofters, a fisherman, violin maker and even a tarot card reader. |
|
Finally, the Liverpool String Quartet is the resident string quartet at The Bluecoat, thanks to the support of the violin maker Michael Phoenix. |
|
By chance I met a violin maker who asked Kremer if he knew where I could find a violin, and he offered me his Stradivarius. |
|
Could shapes of violins tell us something about the function of the instrument, or about which violin makers borrowed ideas from others? |
|
As a youngster Arthur Rowley studied in Italy and discovered the secrets of the master violin makers. |
|
Chou studied violin and erhu and tried to emulate his second brother by dabbling in the harmonica, mandolin, xiao, and the musical saw. |
|
He played the violin giftedly. The music was so beautiful, especially by one so young. |
|
Its simple unison violin accompaniment and its consoling rhythms apparently brought tears to Burney's eyes. |
|
In his fifties, Elgar composed a symphony and a violin concerto that were immensely successful. |
|
|
At his instigation, masses by Cherubini and Hummel were first heard at the Three Choirs Festival by the orchestra in which he played the violin. |
|
Another post he held in his early days was professor of the violin at the Worcester College for the Blind Sons of Gentlemen. |
|
He did not greatly like the piano, and was pleased to begin violin lessons the following year. |
|
In the same year he wrote The Lark Ascending in its original form for violin and piano. |
|
The leader of the first violin section, commonly called the concertmaster, also plays an important role in leading the musicians. |
|
There is also a principal second violin, a principal viola, a principal cello and a principal bass. |
|
Chaplin developed a passion for music as a child and taught himself to play the piano, violin, and cello. |
|
Jonas Kaufmann provided the tenor for 2012 UEFA Champions League Final, whilst David Garrett performed with his violin. |
|
The young Barbirolli began to play the violin when he was four, but soon changed to the cello. |
|
In 2008 his first classical release, Memory Takes My Hand, featuring a violin concerto for Clio Gould, was released on EMI Classics. |
|
During the early 1970s, Robin Gibb played piano and violin occasionally, after which, he only played strings and keyboards privately. |
|
And the voice which would sing like a violin and with a bass that could shake the floor. |
|
The tone of the violin stands out above other instruments, making it appropriate for playing a melody line. |
|
In the hands of a good player, the violin is extremely agile, and can execute rapid and difficult sequences of notes. |
|
The violin is also considered a very expressive instrument, which is often felt to approximate the human voice. |
|
Many leading composers have contributed to the violin concerto and violin sonata repertories. |
|
The earliest references to jazz performance using the violin as a solo instrument are documented during the first decades of the 20th century. |
|
Like many other instruments of classical music, the violin descends from remote ancestors, cruder in form, that were used for folk music. |
|
When played as a folk instrument, the violin is ordinarily referred to in English as a fiddle. |
|
The Indian violin, while essentially the same instrument as that used in Western music, is different in some senses. |
|