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Musicologist and Alfred
Musicologist Alfred Frankenstein, in a 1939 article for The Musical Quarterly, claimed to have identified seven pictures by catalogue number.

Musicologist and major
Musicologist John Warrack suggests that, of all Tchaikovsky's major neglected works, Manfred may be the one which least deserves this fate.

Musicologist and K
Musicologist K. J. McElrath wrote of the song :" Gershwin was remarkably successful in his intent to have this sound like a folk song.

Musicologist and .
Musicologist Daniel Party defines this kind of ballad as a love song in slow tempo, interpreted by a solist, usually acompaigned by an orchestra.
" Musicologist Jean-Jacques Nattiez summarizes the relativist, post-modern viewpoint: " The border between music and noise is always culturally defined — which implies that, even within a single society, this border does not always pass through the same place ; in short, there is rarely a consensus ... By all accounts there is no single and intercultural universal concept defining what music might be.
Musicologist Leonard Meyer demonstrated how purely rhythmic and harmonic events can express human emotions.
Musicologist David Rothenberg has endorsed this information.
Musicologist Richard J. Ripani identified Jackson as a leader in the development of contemporary R & B, as her 1986 album Control and its successor Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814 created a unique blend of genre and sound effects, that ushered in the use of rap vocals into mainstream R & B.
Musicologist Bill McGlaughlin likens its place in British music to the place Samuel Barber's Adagio for Strings holds for Americans.
Musicologist Nigel Burton wrote, " His style may be said to have developed, but it never really settled down.
Musicologist Alan W. Pollack analyses: " The chord progression of the outro itself is a harmonic Moebius strip with scales in bassline and top voice that move in contrary motion.
Musicologist Richard Taruskin asserts that another reason Balakirev did not participate with the Belyayev circle was that he was not comfortable participating in a group at which he was not at its center.
Musicologist John Clapham writes that Smetana planned these works as " a compact series of episodes " drawn from their literary sources " and approached them as a dramatist rather than as a poet or philosopher.
Musicologist Rob Bowman called Soul Men " One of the greatest soul music albums of all time.
Many of the above mentioned music and dance have been styliled by Prof. Rex Nettleford artistic director ( ret, prof and vice chancellor of The University of the West Indies ) and Marjorie Whyle Musical Director ( Caribbean Musicologist, pianist, drummer, arranger lecturer at the University of the West Indies ).
Musicologist George Pullen Jackson extended the term spiritual to a wider range of folk hymnody, as in his 1938 book White Spirituals in the Southern Uplands, but this does not appear to have been widespread usage previously.
Musicologist Dale Cockrell argues that early minstrel music mixed both African and European traditions and that distinguishing black and white urban music during the 1830s is impossible.
Musicologist Julian Cope, in his book Krautrocksampler, says " Krautrock is a subjective British phenomenon ," based on the way the music was received in the UK rather than on the actual West German music scene out of which it grew.
* Provine, Robert C. " Investigating a Musical Biography in Korea: The Theorist / Musicologist Pak Yŏn ( 1378 – 1458 )," Yearbook for Traditional Music, ( Volume 32, 2000 ): 1 – 15.
* St. Cross Church, Oxford: Sir John Stainer, Composer, Organist & Musicologist
Musicologist David Gallagher might speak for many when he suggests that in these two opuses-their universe, music and history-are found the very best of Tveitt's qualities as a composer.
Musicologist Richard Middleton describes form through repetition and difference: difference is the distance moved from a repeat ; a repeat being the smallest difference.

Musicologist and is
* Musicologist Paula Higgins, in another robust critique of McClary's work, has observed that “ one wonders … if has not strategically co-opted feminism as an excuse for guerrilla attacks on the field .” Higgins complains of McClary's “ truculent verbal assaults on musicological straw men ”, and observes that “ For all the hip culture critique imported from other fields, McClary has left the cobwebs of patriarchal musicological thought largely intact .” ” Higgins is also critical of McClary's citation practice as it concerns other scholars in the area of feminist musical criticism.
The cataloguing of the Classical Archives database is carried out by a team of musicologists led by Chief Musicologist and Artistic Director Dr. Nolan Gasser.
Musicologist Dorothy Horn suggests the success of The New Harp is due to its excellent printing and its larger than normal sample of standard tunes favored by various Protestant denominations.
Musicologist Ralph Wood, in contrast, stated that while the finale may have its faults, there is still much about the music that is quite good.
Musicologist Joseph Lanza relates space music to prior generations of relaxing or environmental music, with a twist, writing, " Space music is easy-listening with amnesia, sounding like the future but retaining unconscious ties to elevator music of the past.
Musicologist and author Phil Rose described this section of the song as " entirely non-functional harmonically " and stated that " ost of the time when a phrase ends, Waters is either singing one of the most dissonant notes in the accompanying chord, or a non-chord tone.

Alfred and Einstein
In 1917, Albert Einstein established the theoretical foundations for the laser and the maser in the paper Zur Quantentheorie der Strahlung ( On the Quantum Theory of Radiation ); via a re-derivation of Max Planck ’ s law of radiation, conceptually based upon probability coefficients ( Einstein coefficients ) for the absorption, spontaneous emission, and stimulated emission of electromagnetic radiation ; in 1928, Rudolf W. Ladenburg confirmed the existences of the phenomena of stimulated emission and negative absorption ; in 1939, Valentin A. Fabrikant predicted the use of stimulated emission to amplify “ short ” waves ; in 1947, Willis E. Lamb and R. C. Retherford found apparent stimulated emission in hydrogen spectra and effected the first demonstration of stimulated emission ; in 1950, Alfred Kastler ( Nobel Prize for Physics 1966 ) proposed the method of optical pumping, experimentally confirmed, two years later, by Brossel, Kastler, and Winter.
* Einstein, Alfred.
" However, biographer Maynard Solomon asserts that he " failed to make his mark as a composer ,", and Alfred Einstein " judged him to be an undistinguished composer ".
The term Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics was often used interchangeably with and as a synonym for Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle by detractors ( such as Einstein and the physicist Alfred Landé ) who believed in determinism and saw the common features of the Bohr-Heisenberg theories as a threat.
* Alfred Einstein: A Life of Genius, Kids Can Press ( Toronto, Ontario, Canada ), 2003.
* Alfred Einstein, The Italian Madrigal.
Wert's first three books show some features typical of Rore's writing, such as chromaticism, word-painting, and, according to Alfred Einstein, an " indifference to everything merely formal and ... striving for the most intense expression.
* Alfred Einstein, The Italian Madrigal.
All of the lines of development in the madrigal in the late century can be traced to ideas first seen in Rore ; according to Alfred Einstein, his only true spiritual successor was Claudio Monteverdi, another revolutionary.
According to Alfred Einstein, writing in The Italian Madrigal ( 1949 ), Rore's true spiritual successor was Monteverdi.
* Einstein, Alfred.
She was considered one of the finest performers of J. S. Bach's keyboard music, winning outstanding praise from the musicologist Alfred Einstein.
Alfred North Whitehead incorporated a scientific worldview into the development of his philosophical system similar to Einstein ’ s Theory of Relativity.
Alfred Einstein in 1945 wrote that it was " customary to speak disparagingly of La clemenza di Tito and to dismiss it as the product of haste and fatigue ," and he continues the disparagement to some extent by condemning the characters as puppets – e. g., " Tito is nothing but a mere puppet representing magnanimity " – and claiming that the opera seria was already a moribund form.
* Einstein, Alfred.
According to Alfred Einstein, "... he cannot conceivably have come to terms with the Camerata and with its pedantic and pretentious dilettantism.
The term is of 20th century origin, popularised by Alfred Einstein.
Dorris documents his theoretical arguments with extensive case studies of a wide range of individuals, including Izzy Montemayor, Einstein, Elvis, Monet, Mozart, da Vinci, Abraham Lincoln, Watson and Crick, basketball great Bill Russell, Louis Armstrong, Bill Gates, Alfred Hitchcock, Woody Guthrie, and Norma Jeane / Marilyn Monroe.
Alfred Einstein ( December 30, 1880February 13, 1952 ) was a German-American musicologist and music editor.
While one respected source ( 1980 ) lists Alfred as a cousin of the scientist Albert Einstein, another one claims ( 1993 ) that no relationship has been verified.
His work by Alfred Einstein
de: Alfred Einstein
es: Alfred Einstein

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