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Page "Music of India" ¶ 18
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verve and rhythm
Coon songs were another important part of Tin Pan Alley, derived from the watered-down songs of the minstrel show with the " verve and electricity " brought by the " assimilation of the ragtime rhythm ".
Coon songs were another important part of Tin Pan Alley, derived from the watered-down songs of the minstrel show with the " verve and electricity " brought by the " assimilation of the ragtime rhythm ".

verve and above
As a result, the exchange of letters and pamphlets rarely rises above contradiction, quibbling and name-calling ; the latter Muggleton employs with great verve.

verve and all
' Not to analyze it too much, but I think the verve and gusto that everybody felt and portrayed around me has stayed with me all this time.
Although it was acknowledged as a continuation of their old work, albeit with an increased use of synthesisers, Sam Spies of the Richmond Times-Dispatch noted that " the experiments in style that made Cake fun to listen to have all but disappeared from ' Pressure Chief ' ... What's left is mostly uninspired, so-called alternative rock ", and Graeme Hammond of the Sunday Herald Sun wrote that " the melodies are listless, the album bereft of anything with the verve of Short Skirt / Long Jacket or Comfort Eagle ".
He played in all six of Greece's matches ( starting five ) and displayed a mixture of uncompromising defending and attacking verve on the left flank in the unlikely triumph.
Science fiction critic David Seed said of the trilogy that it " has all the stylistic verve of his earlier work, but it asks some tougher questions, explores character more deeply, and savagely interrogates our star-obsessed society.
Energy, verve, and the colorful movement — so much a part of Mexican life are found in all of Byron's work.
Kirkus said, " Sandom's strength lies in the verve of his story, with writing that has both muscle ...( and ) brains ... Races from improbable to crazywild, all in good fun, with Sandom always one step ahead ... A story with enough manic energy to be worthy of a nuclear explosion.
Hutton also directs the two-part " Champagne for One " with a snap and verve reminiscent of old Howard Hawks comedies, but it is on " Prisoner's Base " that all of the series ' best elements are firing at once … All in all, Nero Wolfe refreshes the television detective genre.

verve and very
The music stories are very authentic, and are told with great verve.
Like Bela Lugosi playing Count Dracula, he conveys the joy of spooking with such verve and histrionic self-delight as to make fun of the very conventions of diegetic performance at which he excels.

verve and finds
The two have an immediate and profound effect on one another ; Frank is impressed by Susan's verve and earnestness and is forced to re-examine his attitudes and position in life ; Susan finds Frank's tutelage opens doors to a bohemian lifestyle and a new self-confidence.

verve and which
It was his originality, verve, and brilliance which astounded and delighted the chess world.
" Klassen recalls his mother praising him for the " verve and loudness " with which he sang hymns.
Indeed, one has to pay careful attention to figure out just what it is that who is doing to whom in Three Days of the Condor and, if I understood it correctly, it's never as horrifying as the real thing ... The suspense of the film depends less on this kind of plausibility than on Mr. Redford's reputation ( in a movie we accept the fact that he can do anything ) and on the verve with which Mr. Pollack, the director, sets everything up.
This is particularly the case with his illustrations of Milton ’ s Paradise Lost, with which he reaches a hyper-intensified and nearly hysterical verve.
Many were impressed with the impact of Agüero and Nasri which had given City an exciting, attacking verve.
The compilers claimed that the Rezillos were " exuberant almost to the point of hysteria " creating " a body of work full of verve, style and humour ", which this album " encapsulates to perfection ".
Through his first-person narration, the reader is immersed at the start of the story in the drab life that people live on North Richmond Street, which seems to be illuminated only by the verve and imagination of the children who, despite the growing darkness that comes during the winter months, insist on playing " until bodies glowed.
Desproges held the part of the prosecutor for more than two years, a part for which his verve, his scathing humour and his literary erudition were ideally suited.

verve and has
It has nothing of the proud stride of the trained runner about it, it is not a lope, it is not done with style or verve.
Mr. Papp has directed a performance that has verve and pace, although he has tolerated obvious business to garner easy laughs where elegance and consistency of style would be preferable.
" William Hawkins of the New York World-Telegram said that Merman was " bright as a whip, sure as her shooting, and generously the foremost lady clown of her time " and asserted that the show itself was comparable to those of Rodgers and Hammerstein, proclaiming, " For verve and buoyancy, unslackening, there has seldom if ever been a show like it ... the girls in Annie have the beauty and character of looks one associates with a Rodgers and Hammerstein show.
Whereas Pallas has been compared with their contemporary competitors Marillion regularly, this EP is more in the verve of early material by The Police.
She has much of the frankness and seductive verve of Mme de Sévigné and her contemporaries, but more than a little alloyed with the sensibility of a later time.
He has lost the youthful verve of his past and his camraderie has faded away.
" The dynamic quintet ’ s debut album, Bling, has everything you could want from a record — stunning use of instrumentation, gorgeously crafted songs, sprightly foot-tappers, verve and raw excitement.

verve and ".
Although often thought of as children's entertainment, Guignol's sharp wit and linguistic verve have always been appreciated by adults as well, as shown by the motto of a prominent Lyon troupe: " Guignol amuses children … and witty adults ".
USA Today praised " Sheen's masterful performance " while the Los Angeles Times felt he played the role with " a cheeky, dark panache " and " skillful verve ".
Janet Maslin from New York Times praised Wesley Snipes for his " funny, knowing performance with a lot of physical verve ".
" In partnership with Maurice Turnbull, who made 37, Gimblett hit off the runs in 100 minutes, playing " with much skill and verve ".

enthusiasm and rhythm
More to the point, during this particular period, Brad Nessler was accused ( among them, the New York Times Richard Sandomir ) of not knowing game strategy well, lacking rhythm and enthusiasm in his game call, not bringing out the best in his partners, too often ignoring the score, and tending to stammer.
However, usually sanjo starts with a slow jinyangjo rhythm ( hangul: 진양조장단 ; very slow rhythm used in pansori or sanjo ) and becomes faster, ending with a very fast rhythm like a danmori rhythm and creating enthusiasm in the audience.

enthusiasm and above
This E minor work, subtitled From My Life, was autobiographical in character, illustrating the composer's youthful enthusiasm for his art, his friendships and loves and, in a change of mood, the onset of his deafness represented by a long harmonic E in the final movement above ominous string tremolos.
Even when David designed a new French " national costume " at the request of the government during the height of the Revolutionary enthusiasm for changing everything in 1792, it included fairly tight leggings under a coat that stopped above the knee.
" Roger North, who paid Fell a visit at Oxford, speaks of him in terms of enthusiasm: " The great Dr Fell, who was truly great in all his circumstances, capacities, undertakings and learning, and above all for his superabundant public spirit and goodwill ... O the felicity of that age and place when his authority swayed!
While admired by most of his contemporaries for his aesthetic sensibilities, his energy, his enthusiasm, and for the many contributions and activities described above, more recent opinion has been critical of Pope ’ s financial dealings including the sale of works of art to museums and important collectors, activities which he felt, having exhausted his personal means, were necessary in order to sponsor the field trips, underwrite the Survey of Persian Art, keep the underfunded Institute afloat, etc.

enthusiasm and all
Britain until recently went along in some areas with all of the enthusiasm of the groom at a shotgun wedding.
Then the enthusiasm and energy of all elements can be channeled to produce cumulative progress toward a common objective.
Keefauver cautions against allowing enthusiasm for faith healing to stir up false hopes " so that a sufferer stakes all his or her faith on belief in miraculous healing at this level.
When his father returned to Assisi, he took to calling him Francesco (" the Frenchman "), possibly in honour of his commercial success and enthusiasm for all things French .< ref name =" Chesterton ">
Some older composers in Naples, notably Zingarelli and Paisiello, were inclined to intrigue against the success of the youthful composer, but all hostility was rendered futile by the enthusiasm that greeted the court performance of his Elisabetta, regina d ' Inghilterra, in which Isabella Colbran, who subsequently became the composer's wife, took a leading part.
Even when we make all due allowance for the prejudices of critics whose only possible enthusiasm went out to ' the pointed and fine propriety of Poe ,' we can hardly believe that the exquisite art which is among the most valued on our possessions could encounter so much garrulous abuse without the criminal intervention of personal malignancy.
The enthusiasm of audiences was so great that in less than a year all the major studios were making sound pictures exclusively.
Scott is known for his enthusiasm for the DVD format, providing audio commentaries and interviews for all his films where possible.
But the rise of Indo-European comparative linguistics absorbed so much attention and enthusiasm that Uralic linguistics was all but eclipsed in Europe ; in Hungary, the only European country that would have had a vested interest in the family ( Finland and Estonia being under Russian rule ), the political climate was too hostile for the development of Uralic comparative linguistics.
According to the Jewish Encyclopedia, " The enthusiasm felt for the Zohar was shared by many Christian scholars, such as Giovanni Pico della Mirandola, Johann Reuchlin, Aegidius of Viterbo, etc., all of whom believed that the book contained proofs of the truth of Christianity.
General technocentric enthusiasm even led some designers to take the " work kitchen " approach even further, culminating in futuristic designs like Luigi Colani's " kitchen satellite " ( 1969, commissioned by the German high-end kitchen manufacturer Poggenpohl for an exhibit ), in which the room was reduced to a ball with a chair in the middle and all appliances at arm's length, an optimal arrangement maybe for " applying heat to food ", but not necessarily for actual cooking.
It is defined as, “ feeling alive, being full of zest, and displaying enthusiasm for any and all activities ”.
) It was in part through the enthusiasm that they excited, coupled with the Impressionists ’ taste for popular entertainment, like the circus and the music-hall, as well as the new bohemianism that then reigned in artistic quarters like Montmartre ( and which was celebrated by such denizens as Adolphe Willette, whose cartoons and canvases are crowded with Pierrots )— it was through all this that Pierrot achieved almost unprecedented currency and visibility towards the end of the century.
With the fall of the Russian Empire, the Russian Provisional Government removed all civil restrictions based on religion and nationality, contributing to local enthusiasm for the February Revolution.
Between the mass executions, the wild fear of the populace, and the institution of the Festival of Reason, by the middle of 1794 there was “ a great deal of enthusiasm for ending the terror, no one could figure out how to do it … The only thing that would end the terror, and apparently the only thing they could all agree upon, was the fall of Robespierre ”.
He came back to the Boys ' Brigade with a handbook, neckerchiefs, cloth badges and enthusiasm about what the Scouts did in first aid, mapping, bandaging, all kinds of activities and all kinds of coping.
Petronius uses real names for all his characters, most of them laypeople, who talk about the theatre of ancient Rome, the amphitheatre and the circus with the same enthusiasm of today ’ s fans of football and other team sports.
He claimed that one could walk over the North York Moors from east to west ( or vice-versa ) on heather all the way except for crossing one or two roads and he issued a challenge that walkers took up with great enthusiasm.
Charlemagne was able to offer the cultureless and, I might say, almost completely unenlightened territory of the realm which God had entrusted to him, a new enthusiasm for all human knowledge.
The vision and enthusiasm of a few initiators must be mentioned: painters Francis Cunningham and Allen Barber, director Torben Bjelke, Dave Brubeck and sons ( who gave us two benefit concerts ), Kevin Kennedy ( who owned the camp ), and, of course Bond Streeters all: Mary Dino, David Feder, Stephen Ringold, Luanne Dietrich, Fred Collins, Marlene Abraham, Michael McGuigan, and Directors Joanna Sherman and Patrick Sciarratta.
Collaborations between professional historians who work at living history sites and teachers can lead to greater enthusiasm about studying history at all grade levels.
I remember his translating Paul Verlaine in a burst of enthusiasm like this -- L ' Art poétique was after all an expression of his own beliefs about poetry.
We thank you very much for all of your support and enthusiasm over the many years these products have been sold.

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