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Page "Disc jockey" ¶ 21
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Some Related Sentences

Turntablism and art
Turntablism, the art of using turntables not only to play music but to manipulate sound and create original music, began to develop.
Turntablism is the art of manipulating sounds and creating music using phonograph turntables and a DJ mixer.
Turntablism as a modern art form and musical practice has its roots within hip hop and hip hop culture of the early 1970s.
Turntablism, b-boying and even aerosol art at times were used to not only present POC but represent hip hop culture and expose to parts of South Africa where people did not know what hip hop was.

Turntablism and is
Turntablism is the technique of manipulating sounds and creating music using phonograph turntables and a DJ mixer.

Turntablism and turntable
Since its release in 1978, SL-1200MK2 and its successors have been the most common turntable for DJing and Scratching aka — Turntablism.

Turntablism and musical
* Turntablism, using the device as a modern musical instrument

Turntablism and for
Its updated model, SL-1200MK2, released in 1978, had a stronger motor, a convenient pitch control slider for beatmatching and a stylus illuminator, which made it the long standing favourite among disc jockeys ( see " Turntablism ").
The college has also garnered local and national press for offering the first accredited DJ and Turntablism classes at a publicly-funded college in the Music Department.

Turntablism and music
More recently, electronic free improvisation has drawn on Circuit bending, Noise music, DIY-culture and Turntablism, represented by performers such as Yoshihide Otomo, Hemmelig Tempo, Günter Müller, poire z and many others.

embodies and art
Understanding a work of art involves recognition of the ideas that it reflects or embodies.
This embodies all art forms, the sciences, and philosophies.
A key distinction between folk and outsider art is that folk art typically embodies traditional forms and social values, where outsider art stands in some marginal relationship to society's mainstream.
definition of cruelty informs Artaud's own, declaring that all art embodies and intensifies the underlying brutalities of life to recreate the thrill of experience ...
A flyer was distributed with the following text: ' Second-Wave ‘ Feminists ’, A hot load from my monstrous tranny-cock embodies womanhood more than the pieces of menstral ( sic ) art your transphobic cunts could ever hope to create.
Its unique modern design embodies a contemporary expression of traditional Islamic art calligraphy and ornamentation.

embodies and cutting
The state of mind produced by that shock is reflected in his novel Ultime lettere di Jacopo Ortis ( The Last Letters of Jacopo Ortis ) ( 1798 ), which was described by the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica as a more politicized version of Goethe's The Sorrows of Young Werther, " for the hero of Foscolo embodies the mental sufferings and suicide of an undeceived Italian patriot just as the hero of Goethe places before us the too delicate sensitiveness embittering and at last cutting short the life of a private German scholar.

embodies and back
Though they conceive of mimesis in quite different ways, its relation with diegesis is identical in Plato's and Aristotle's formulations ; one represents, the other reports ; one embodies, the other narrates ; one transforms, the other indicates ; one knows only a continuous present, the other looks back on a past.

embodies and more
Munch's figures appear to play roles on a theatre stage ( Death in the Sick-Room ), whose pantomime of fixed postures signify various emotions ; since each character embodies a single psychological dimension, as in The Scream, Munch's men and women now appear more symbolic than realistic.
They emphasize that not every film noir embodies all five attributes in equal measure — one might be more dreamlike ; another, particularly brutal.
Kurtz embodies all forms of an urge to be more or less than human.
* Crypto equipment: Any equipment that embodies cryptographic logic or performs one or more cryptographic functions ( key generation, encryption, and authentication ).
As a result, critics have been much more likely in recent years to describe Cleopatra as a character that confuses or deconstructs gender than as a character that embodies the feminine.
Film critic Nick Schager wrote, " Never was Mike Hammer's name more fitting than in Kiss Me Deadly, Robert Aldrich's blisteringly nihilistic noir in which star Ralph Meeker embodies Mickey Spillane's legendary P. I.
The History is much more than the vindication of a party ; it is an attempt to insinuate a view of politics, pragmatic, reverent, essentially Burkean, informed by a high, even tumid sense of the worth of public life, yet fully conscious of its interrelations with the wider progress of society ; it embodies what Hallam had merely asserted, a sense of the privileged possession by Englishmen of their history, as well as of the epic dignity of government by discussion.
Pico, a student of Ficino, embodies a more ambitious attempt to use the philosophies and theologies of the past, especially the priscia theologica.
"... our common stock of words embodies all the distinctions men have found worth drawing, and the connections they have found worth marking, in the lifetime of many generations: these surely are likely to be more numerous, more sound, since they have stood up to the long test of survival of the fittest, and more subtle, at least in all ordinary and reasonable practical matters, than any that you or I are likely to think up in our armchair of an afternoon — the most favourite alternative method.
For each Yozi, there are at least a dozen Third Circle demons including the Fetich, each third circle demon rivals the most powerful gods and elementals in power and embodies and defines an aspect of the Yozi, which will change if the demon is permanently slain, with more dramatic changes including a new name and identity resulting from the death of a Fetich.
A car parking at one point had more value than the accumulated historical inheritance – human cooperation, technological processes, architectural and urban planning – that a square embodies.
According to Obama, his vision embodies a " bold new approach to human space flight that embraces commercial industry, forges international partnerships, and invests in the building blocks of a more capable approach to space exploration.
Michelangelo, more even than Raphael or Leonardo, embodies a standard of artistic genius which reveals a radically changed image of human beings and their potential ..."
In Der Zauberlehrling and in the story's iteration in the 1940 animated film Fantasia, it is generally presumed that the story embodies some maxim or moral, and that it is something along the lines of " don't meddle with things you don't understand " or offers a metaphor for modern society where youth and inexperience is enthroned, resulting in an increasingly out of control mess being made, and in need of ' our betters ' to return and take charge once more.
According to the orthodox viewpoint of Confucian society, love was not supposed to be a basis for marriage, as most marriages were arranged by the parents of the couples, but the happy ending of The Romance of the Western Chamber embodies the aspirations of people for more meaningful and happier lives.
Further, if the Gospel of Mark embodies the recollections of Peter, it would be difficult to find a more reliable authority for topographical details connected with the sea on which his fisher life was spent.
This visual evolution reflects a more profound come-back of the programme to its original inspiration: depicting Groland as a character who by the voice of its various and colourful citizens embodies the hidden face of the French society.
* " The sight of beauty which embodies itself in a living being is infinitely more touching than that of more grandiose work.

embodies and creative
Thich Nhat Hanh wrote of Baker, " To me, he embodies very much the future of Buddhism in the West with his creative intelligence and his aliveness.
Diana Potts from Allmusic noted of Auto-Biography that the album " embodies precise, simplistic, and creative production, while keeping it comprehensible and simultaneously challenging.

embodies and manner
Outside of Mexican American communities, the term might assume a negative meaning if it is used in a manner that embodies the prejudices and bigotries long directed at Mexican and Mexican-American people in the United States.
History, according to Hegel, proceeds and evolves in a dialectical manner: the present embodies the rational sublation, or " synthesis ", of past contradictions.
Predominantly, Theravada Buddhism views the Dhammakaya ( Dharmakaya ) as a figurative term relating to the manner in which the Buddha exemplifies or embodies the Dharma.
The fourth party embodies a range of capabilities in the same manner that the third party does.
This impulse embodies no reasoning and, in fact, urges people to act upon things in the opposite manner to what logic would suggest.

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