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These and pianos
These bands would inspire information recording for automatic pianos and more recently NC machine-tools.
These specially designed pianos fall under the series Steinway Art Case Pianos or Steinway Limited Edition Pianos.
These medals won in Europe increased the demand for Steinway pianos, thus the reason the family looked into opening a store in London.
These are the only available recordings using Nancarrow's original instruments: two 1927 Ampico player pianos, one with metal-covered felt hammers and the other with leather strips on the hammers, representing the most faithful reproduction of what Nancarrow heard in his own studio.
; Split stack control: These instruments ( the vast majority of all player pianos ) have the pneumatic player mechanism divided into two approximately equal halves.
; Reproducing pianos: These are fully automated versions of the player piano requiring no human manual control in order to produce the illusion of a live musical performance.
These upright grand pianos, made in Chicago and New York, were called " Tonk pianos ".
These concerts were presented in elegant settings with both pianists formally dressed, and performing on Yamaha concert grand pianos.
These pianos are often called ' hybrid pianos ', as they have characteristics of both acoustic pianos ( the piano sound is made by hammers on strings ) and digital pianos ( record / playback capability, as well as synthesizer and audio sound capability ).
These recordings use a set of nine restored or replica pianos, each of a type contemporaneous with the sonata being performed.
These usually include many types of pianos and organs, string, percussion, brass and woodwind instruments, as well as modern and vintage synthesizer sounds, sampled effects etc.
These used a pin-hole music roll and a pneumatic action as used on player pianos.
These included Franz Liszt, with whom he played arrangements of two of Liszt's symphonic poems ( Les Préludes, and Tasso, Lamento e Trionfo ) for 2 pianos, Hector Berlioz, Gioachino Rossini, Charles Gounod, Felix Mendelssohn, Sigismond Thalberg and Charles-Marie Widor.
These are sometimes called piano " piano reductions ", because the multiplicity of orchestral parts — in an orchestral piece there may be as many as two dozen separate instrumental parts being played simultaneously — has to be reduced to what a single pianist ( or occasionally two pianists, on one or two pianos, such as the different arrangements for George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue ) can manage to play.

These and today
These are still in wide use today, particularly in semi-rigid formulations, for such applications as cores for sandwich-type structural panels, foamed-in-place insulation, automotive safety padding, arm rests, etc..
These include the Athanasian creed, which is today generally seen as being of 5th-century Galician origin.
These ideas were initially taken as postulates, but today there are efforts to test each of them.
These definitions are archaic, their relevance having dissipated with the development of the English legal system over the centuries, but they do explain the origin of the term as used today.
These cards, slightly larger than today ’ s postcards, were produced by letterpress and wood engraving on coated card stock.
These areas have ruins from the wars against the Cathars which are still visible today.
These songs of longing and romance once served as a courtship ritual and still do today to some extent on this island where the drum is an integral part of the culture.
These early physicians ( people like Itard, Seguin, Howe, Gallaudet ) set the foundation for special education today.
These Norse-Gaels had intermarried with the local Gaelic speaking people in Britain, a feature that is still visible in the Faroese genes today, which prove to be mixed Scandinavian-British.
These descriptors often developed into fixed clan identifications which in turn became family names as we know them today.
These were not political parties as that term is understood today, but groups clustered around one or more beliefs, some of the believers attaching themselves to more than one group.
These tended to be wide and large, some of them used for hunting game on ( much as a game reserve would today ) and others as leisure gardens.
These primordial structures would eventually become the galaxies we see today.
These writings, in the words of Henry Cadbury, Professor of Divinity at Harvard University and a leading Quaker, " contain a few fresh phrases of his own, are generally characterized by an excess of scriptural language and today they seem dull and repetitious ".
These devices are still used today.
These later scholars tested their claims and agreed to them, so that today, they are considered the most reliable collections of hadith.
( These " sessions " were similar to " Live Lounge " sessions recorded today for the station.
These types of lamps are still in use today in areas of the world without electricity, because they give a much better light than a simple wick-type lamp does ..
These were dismantled in 1987 and replaced by a lighting system embedded in the roof of each stand, which remains in use today.
These formulations of quantum mechanics continue to be used today.
These early stars likely played a role in the cloud's formation, since the number of close stellar passages within the cluster was much higher than today, leading to far more frequent perturbations.
These apes likely lived in drier and cooler environments then orangutans do today.
These new features were groundbreaking at the time, and are still utilized in Roland's electronic percussion today.
These roamed the rural borderlands of central Europe embarking on many of the same illegal activities associated with today ’ s crime organisations, with the exception of money laundering.
These views led to a view on property rights that might today be described as legal positivism.

These and command
These include scouting, skirmishing with enemy reconnaissance elements to deny them knowledge of own disposition of troops, forward security, offensive reconnaissance by combat, defensive screening of friendly forces during retrograde movement, retreat, restoration of command and control, deception, battle handover and passage of lines, relief in place, linkup, breakout operations, and raiding.
These experts demonstrate that education in the English language and a good command of it is vital to identify that doublespeak is employed.
These forces included command and control systems, radar installations, and Surface-to-Air ( SAM ) missile units as well as interceptor fighters.
These weapons are typically used to strike critical, vulnerable targets such as computerized command and control vehicles, radio trucks, radar antennae, vehicle engine blocks and the jet engines of enemy aircraft.
These " orthodox editors " let the user open a " command line " into which commands and REXX statements can be typed.
These critics often discern in the film a thinly disguised attempt to glorify the military by portraying Patton as an inspirational leader, a commander whose bold plans to conquer Germany and end the war were constantly sabotaged by higher command as well as his military inferiors on the battlefield.
These rules are typical for control applications in that the antecedents consist of the logical combination of the error and error-delta signals, while the consequent is a control command output.
These steps include substituting markets in property rights, such as emission rights, for command and control.
These include brainfuck ( 8 commands, all with 0 operands ), OISC ( 1 command, 2 to 3 operands ), and Thue ( 1 command, 2 operands ).
These allow owners to secrete on command any of a wide selection of synthetic drugs, from the merely relaxing to the mind-altering: ' Snap ' is described in Use of Weapons and The Player of Games as " The Culture's favourite breakfast drug ".
These listings were stored in local files to be searched using the Unix < tt > grep </ tt > command.
These are commonly known by the names used in the < tt > mount </ tt > command to invoke particular drivers in the kernel: msdos, vfat, and umsdos.
These screenshots showed the new interface of the game, which looked like the human interface in the eventual final release, however had small cannons above the minimap and the command button space.
These laws and regulations can take the form of " command and control " regulation ( such as setting standards, targets, or process requirements ), or environmental pricing reform ( such as ecotaxes or other pigovian taxes, tradable pollution permits or the creation of markets for ecological services ).
These armies are placed under the command of consuls Lucius Aemilius Papus and Gaius Atilius Regulus.
These measures gave each platoon a clearer picture of how it fitted into the greater battle plan, and in so doing, reduced the command and control problems that plagued First World War combat.
These officers have command authority over the cadets, counsel cadets on leadership and military career issues, oversee military training and serve as role models for the future officers.
These members are the upper echelons of the gang ’ s command.
These troops of different faiths were joining to the service of the Christian kingdoms as they once had been under the command of the Muslim kingdoms.
These macros ( along with the finger command distributed in Unix version 4. 2BSD ) inspired the IOCCC-International Obfuscated C Code Contest.
These models, however command a relatively high price ; with most tanks in the Tamiya range costing in excess of $ 700.
These evaluations include operational effectiveness and suitability, command and control, performance of aircraft hardware and software systems, employment tactics, and accuracy and reliability of associated precision weapons.
These lots were less expensive, and Bartlett encouraged their purchase by African-American families with whom he was indirectly associated from his command of U. S. Colored Troops in the Civil War.

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