The orchestra played a fugue emphasizing the woodwinds and brass sections. From LearnThat.org.
And knowing what a fugue is can make you fall in love with Bach. From Wordnik.com. [Tunes For Thought] Reference
A fugue is a repetition of parts in a musical composition. From Wordnik.com. [The Standard Speller; Containing Exercises for Oral Spelling; also, Sentences for Silent Spelling by Writing from Dictation. In Which the Representative Words and the Anomalous Words of the English Language are so Classified as to Indicate Their Pronunciation, and to be Fixed in the Memory by Association.] Reference
"And the fugue is a kind of piece where one part pursues the other, --". From Wordnik.com. [Malcolm] Reference
The reasons for his fugue are mysterious, and they need to stay that way for at least half of the novel. From Wordnik.com. [Writer Unboxed » Blog Archive » Creating the Care Factor] Reference
June 19th, 2006 at 1:25 am spiderpaws, a fugue is a musical structure based on permutations of a melody. From Wordnik.com. [Firedoglake » Head of Household] Reference
The most common psychological form of retrograde amnesia Kopelman encounters is known as the fugue state. From Wordnik.com. [The Sydney Morning Herald News Headlines] Reference
Many people in psychology and psychiatry believe in a phenomenon called a fugue state, a dissociative reaction. From Wordnik.com. [main page collection] Reference
He's in a kind of fugue state right now, sort of a heightened denial. From Wordnik.com. [Arthur Rosenfeld: Quiet Teacher: Part Four] Reference
And he uses the terms fugue and inner demons. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript May 5, 2005] Reference
It became a novel in six voices, a kind of fugue, with scenes played and replayed. From Wordnik.com. [Top stories from Times Online] Reference
And this can include something called dissociative fugue. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Jul 3, 2007] Reference
There's a little mini-fugue that shows up in this ballade. From Wordnik.com. [Chopin With A Polish Touch] Reference
Mr. VIEAUX: I'm just gonna do a little bit of the fugue from 998. From Wordnik.com. [Jason Vieaux Picks Out a New Guitar] Reference
Melnikov's technical prowess is blistering in No. 15's chaotic fugue. From Wordnik.com. [On CD: Melnikov's Shostakovich] Reference
In the same period, the "recipe" to compose a fugue was also established. From Wordnik.com. [The Brain, A Decoded Enigma] Reference
One of his best speeches might be made into blank verse or set to a fugue. From Wordnik.com. [The Masques of Ottawa] Reference
A dissociative fugue is when someone actually disappears off the face of this earth. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Jul 3, 2007] Reference
The movement is a theme and variations, with a fugue, and was also published by Beethoven as a. From Wordnik.com. [The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 30, April, 1860] Reference
The supper-horn sends forth a hoarse but mellow fugue in swells and cadences from the farm-house. From Wordnik.com. [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 12, No. 31, October, 1873] Reference
Compared to a Bach fugue, which has perhaps four melodies in interplay, Griffiths says Ligeti's has 40. From Wordnik.com. [Composer Ligeti, a Kubrick Favorite, Has Died] Reference
Beethoven composes variations upon it, and, to render it more worthy of his friend Lichnowsky, adds the fugue. From Wordnik.com. [The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 30, April, 1860] Reference
Occasionally an evidently fugal subject is announced, which is never destined to form the subject for a fugue. From Wordnik.com. [The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII, No. 355, October 16, 1886] Reference
The King next requested him to play a six-part fugue, and Bach extemporised one on a theme selected by himself. From Wordnik.com. [Story-Lives of Great Musicians] Reference
Scarlatti and Bach would laugh at the efforts styled 'canon' and 'fugue,' by the aspiring tyros of the present age. From Wordnik.com. [Continental Monthly , Vol. 6, No. 1, July, 1864 Devoted to Literature and National Policy.] Reference
The organist was now engaged upon the coda of his fugue; the former motifs were rehearsed -- love, sorrow, and revenge. From Wordnik.com. [Border Ghost Stories] Reference
(Soundbite of Schumann's "Second Symphony") Ms. ALSOP: And you can hear the fugue, little mini-fugues going on underneath. From Wordnik.com. [Robert Schumann: Music amid the Madness] Reference
Conservatory graduate, is the author of an introduction and fugue for organ, besides some effective songs and other works. From Wordnik.com. [Woman's Work in Music] Reference
But he's also revelatory in slower music, especially the enigmatic No. 16 fugue, with its improvised, almost medieval flavor. From Wordnik.com. [On CD: Melnikov's Shostakovich] Reference
Samantha's identity is so invested in her audacious sexuality that all the contradictions produce a convulsive fit, a fugue state. From Wordnik.com. ['Sex And The City 2': Sheiks, Shrieks And Eeks] Reference
(Soundbite of music) ELLIOTT: What Jason will be looking for is that every line in this fugue is coming through very, very clearly. From Wordnik.com. [Jason Vieaux Picks Out a New Guitar] Reference
I mean, I have to find at least two electric guitar players that can play in five-four time a fugue, you know, read music, etcetera. From Wordnik.com. [Revisiting Bernstein's Immodest 'Mass'] Reference
Her teachers were LeCouppey in piano, Savard in harmony, counterpoint, and fugue, Marsick in violin, and Benjamin Godard in composition. From Wordnik.com. [Woman's Work in Music] Reference
The "Goldberg" variations. 4 duets, and an important collection of organ choral-preludes, with the "St Anne" prelude and fugue in E flat. From Wordnik.com. [Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 3, Part 1, Slice 1 "Austria, Lower" to "Bacon"] Reference
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