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musical and statues
Melody World is a museum showcasing wax statues and musical instruments.
During this outburst of musical jubilation the congregation's candles are extinguished, the church lights are turned on, and bells rung while the church's decorative funnings — altar frontals, the reredos, lectern hangings, processional banners, statues and paintings — which had been stripped or covered during Holy Week, are ceremonially replaced and unveiled and flowers are placed on altars and elsewhere.
Other types of water organ were played out of sight and were used to simulate musical instruments apparently being played by statues in mythological scenes such as ' Orpheus playing the viol ', ' The contest between Apollo and Marsyas ' and ' Apollo and the nine Muses '.
The " Coupes " and the " Colères " featured sliced, burned, or smashed objects arranged on canvas, often using objects with a strong " identity " such as musical instruments ( mainly violins and saxophones ) or bronze statues.
It houses the Sultan's Museum, which contains a multitude of royal gowns, arms, musical instruments, statues, jewellery, masks and colourful bead-covered thrones carved in the shapes of the men who sat on them.
This extensive collection has exhibits on Bamoun history and art, including cooking implements, musical instruments, pipes, statues, masks, gongs and an ornately carved xylophone.
These include typical indigenous dresses, ornaments, arms and ammunitions, coins, statues made of wood, bronze and other metals, musical instruments, ivory products, handicrafts, paintings on tribal life etc.
The world record for musical statues was set on the 25th April 2010.

musical and ',
* It is the subject of a ballet, Still Life at the Penguin Café, and a song, ' A Dream too Far ', in the ecological musical Rockford's Rock Opera.
Travis Jackson has also proposed a broader definition of jazz which is able to encompass all of the radically different eras: he states that it is music that includes qualities such as " swinging ", improvising, group interaction, developing an ' individual voice ', and being ' open ' to different musical possibilities ".
* Jammin ', musical comedy show
" Another emphasis on the musicality of the poem came in August 1834, with Henry Nelson Coleridge analysis in the Quarterly Review: " In some of the smaller pieces, as the conclusion of the ' Kubla Khan ', for example, not only the lines by themselves are musical, but the whole passage sounds all at once as an outburst or crash of harps in the still air of autumn.
* Natalia Paruz, also known as the ' Saw Lady ', plays the musical saw in movie soundtracks, in TV commercials, with orchestras internationally, and is the organizer of international saw festivals in New York City and Israel.
Schaeffer's use of the word jeu, from the verb jouer, carries the same double meaning as the English verb play: ' to enjoy oneself by interacting with one's surroundings ', as well as ' to operate a musical instrument ' ( Dack 2002 ).
An alternative spelling in English is ' vocal chords ', possibly due to the musical connotations or to confusion with the geometrical definition of the word " chord ".
Zeena discusses: the relationships between the Manson family and the Church of Satan, the 80's ' Satanic Panic ', the 8-8-88 satanic rally, her time as spokeswoman for the Church of Satan, her media and musical appearances during her time as CoS High Priestess, etc.
His personal approach, an expressive and often turbulent one known as Empfindsamer or ' sensitive style ', applied the principles of rhetoric and drama to musical structures.
At the last show of the tour, as the group considers venturing into a musical theatre production on the theme of Jack the Ripper entitled ' Saucy Jack ', Tufnel reappears and informs them that while their American reception is poor, the group is wildly popular in Japan.
The purpose of the tour is to stage concerts by the ' Holywelkin Orchestra ', a futuristic musical instrument played by a selected master.
The motif cannot be both the bearer of expression and a musical ' gesture ', because that reduces emotional content to a mechanical process.
She won a Tony Award for her performance in the Broadway musical Ain't Misbehavin ', as well as an Emmy Award for her reprisal of the role on television.
Berlin in the 20s also proved to be a haven for English writers such as W. H. Auden, Stephen Spender and Christopher Isherwood, who wrote a series of ' Berlin novels ', inspiring the play I Am a Camera, which was later adapted into a musical, Cabaret, and an Academy Award winning film of the same name.
Many enduring musical standards come from this show, among them Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin ', The Surrey with the Fringe on Top, I Cain't Say No, the aforementioned People Will Say We're in Love, and Oklahoma !.
Poggioli was concerned with how death reconciled itself with the pastoral, and thus came up with a loose categorization of death in the pastoral as ' funeral elegy ', the most important tropes of which he cites as religion ( embodied by Pan ); friendship ; allegory ; and poetic and musical calling.
Born late May 1992 Steve's oldest son, " Fi-Fi ", was fast to catch onto his fathers passion for musical performance and production and while still at school played and managed the glamrock-folk band ' The Bad Habits ', which toured Korea and South-America receiving mixed reviews from their primarily elderly audiences.
" Although there is speculation on what he meant by musical ' color ', be it orchestration or harmonic, one can observe ' shades ' of a particular sound quality in his music.
And in 2010 the Greek Lefteris Kordis gave a performance of his ' Aesop Project ', a setting of seven fables which mixes traditional East Mediterranean and Western Classical musical textures, combined with elements of jazz.
Tiomkin's contrasting musical themes continue throughout the film, delineating two characters with substantial differences: " For ' Guy's Theme ', Tiomkin created a hesitant, passive idea, made-to-order music for Farley Granger's performance.
Halford accepted leaving his band ' Hiroshima ', and brought along drummer John Hinch, who would later be dropped by the band after one album due to " musical inadequacy ", according to Tipton in later years.
* In the Stephen Sondheim musical ' A Little Night Music ', the two Night Waltzes deal specifically with the phenomenon of Midnight Sun.
Goulet's first film performance was released in 1962: the UPA ( United Productions of America ) animated musical feature Gay Purr-ee, in which he provided the voice of the male lead character, ' Jaune Tom ', opposite the female lead character, ' Mewsette ', voiced by Judy Garland.

musical and players
The use of musical instruments is traditionally forbidden on the Sabbath out of concern that players would be tempted to repair their instruments, which is forbidden on those days.
When patched together, these phrases combined to create musical pieces which could be performed by human players.
This could be converted into musical notation by hand and then performed by human players.
Conservatories, which are the standard musical training system in France and in Quebec ( Canada ) provide lessons and amateur orchestral experience for double bass players.
Some contemporary players of these modern electric harps, especially solid body and minimalist design instruments, have been able to add the advantage of movement on stage into their musical performance.
Organized by Natalia ' Saw Lady ' Paruz, 53 musical saw players performed together.
The updated play, staged at the Pasadena Playhouse, featured musical theatre actor Robert Yacko as the fartiste, with sound effects provided by the band's trombone and piccolo players.
This musical palindrome was for piano, recorder and cello and again was universally reversible-two players could play from the same sheet of music reading from opposite ends.
They all came to be famous players and the Dixieland Band has gone down now in musical history .”
Many players switch between two, three and four mallets depending on the demands of their current musical situations.
Many vibes players adapt the " standard " grips by varying degrees to suit their personal physiology and musical expression.
The line-up of Copeland, Sting, and Summers was an unusual trio at a time when progressive rock, symphonic rock, and other sound trends lent themselves to musical ensembles with support players.
Especially in musical theatre orchestras, woodwind players are commonly referred to as " reed players " or " reeds ".
A string quartet is a musical ensemble of four string players – usually two violin players, a violist and a cellist – or a piece written to be performed by such a group.
Although there is no aural proof, as audio recordings were not around for more than 150 years, that string players in Europe did not use vibrato, its overuse was almost universally condemned by the leading musical authorities of the day.
This resulted in the format being taken more seriously for musical use, and started the era of high fidelity cassettes and players.
The town is home to the past and current world champion musical saw players.
There was a hiatus in musical activity for Hynde until 1990, when Hynde hired session players ( including one-time Pretenders Bremner and Cunningham and bassist, John Mckenzie ) and released Packed!
The berimbau, a musical bow from Brazil, is quickly gaining players worldwide as a result of its association with the game of capoeira.
The children's television programme Sounds Exciting, broadcast in 1968, was a musical education series culminating in a final " whodunit " called Dead in Tune with Robin Ray's original story set to the music of Herbert Chappell performed by a chamber group of players from the Leicestershire Schools Symphony Orchestra.
" There was much competition for good orchestral players, with well-paid engagements offered by more than fifty music halls, by pit bands in West End musical comedies, and by grand hotels and restaurants which maintained orchestras.
" There was much competition for good orchestral players, with well-paid engagements offered by more than fifty music halls, by pit bands in West End musical comedies, and by grand hotels and restaurants which maintained orchestras.

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