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Page "Alphabet song" ¶ 4
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tune and is
In the tune to which this hymn is most often sung, `` Boylston '', the syllables have and fy, ending their lines, have twice the time any other syllables have.
Ward was generally considered the best music as early as 1910 and is still the popular tune today.
It has been associated with more than 20 melodies, but in 1835 it was joined to a tune named " New Britain " to which it is most frequently sung today.
The first known instance of Newton's lines joined to music was in A Companion to the Countess of Huntingdon's Hymns ( London, 1808 ), where it is set to the tune " Hephzibah " by English composer John Jenkins Husband.
As neither tune is attributed and both show elements of oral transmission, scholars can only speculate that they are possibly of British origin.
This effect is ubiquitous in karaoke machines and is often used to assist pop singers who sing out of tune.
The first was a radio receiver, such as the Icom PCR-1000, that could tune into the Reverse Channel, which is the frequency that the phones transmit data to the tower on.
* In the movie Wag the Dog, the fictitious unit 303 Special Forces has a song created titled " The Men of the 303 " that is played to a deliberately similar but original tune written by Huey Lewis for the film.
For real-time, it is appropriate to simplify one or more common approximations, and tune to the exact parameters of the scenery in question, which is also tuned to the agreed parameters to get the most ' bang for the buck '.
CND's policy of opposing American nuclear bases is said to be in tune with public opinion.
The club's theme song is called " See the Bombers Fly Up " and is based on the tune of Johnnie Hamp's 1929 song " Keep Your Sunny Side Up " at an increased tempo.
If the open string is in tune, but sharp or flat when frets are pressed, the bridge saddle position can be adjusted with a screwdriver or hex key to remedy the problem.
The author of the tune is unknown, and it may originate in plainchant, but a 1619 attribution to John Bull is sometimes made.
In the United States, the tune is used for the patriotic " My Country, ' Tis of Thee.
The first published version of what is almost the present tune appeared in 1744 in Thesaurus Musicus.
This manuscript has the tune depart from that which is used today at several points, one as early as the first bar, but is otherwise clearly a strong relative of the contemporary anthem.
The body of the report, from Conrad ’ s materialistic perspective, is good because it describes a people in tune with nature.
The music to which a hymn may be sung is a hymn tune.
The tune style or form is technically designated " gospel songs " as distinct from hymns.

tune and more
Slowly he pulled out the hand throttle until the boat was moving at little more than a crawl, and watched Elaine rapidly spin from one station to another, tune in the null, then draw in a line on the chart.
The alteration to a " guitar " form made the instrument easier to hold and transport, and the addition of frets enabled bassists to play in tune more easily.
O ' Higgins and Freire listened to it with respect and full of emotion, for they had marched to victory to its tune more than once.
The advantages to this system compared with unfretted instruments ( see below ) include relative ease of tuning ( with around half as many strings to keep in tune ), greater volume ( though still not really enough for use in chamber music ), and a clearer, more direct sound.
Disadvantages include a smaller volume, even though many or most unfretted instruments tend to be significantly larger than fretted instruments ; and many more strings to keep in tune.
" Schatz states that he would be "... more likely to use it in a live situation than on a recording — for a solo or to punctuate a particular place in a song or tune where I wouldn't be obliterating someone's solo.
After World War II, however, Capra's career declined as his subjects were more out of tune with the mood of audiences.
Spurred by the perception that women were not treated equitably in many religions, some women turned to a Female Deity as more in tune with their spiritual needs.
On these changes, Carr said: " The Office of the Governor should be less associated with pomp and ceremony, less encumbered by anachronistic protocol, more in tune with the character of the people.
It is sung by The White Knight in chapter eight to a tune that he claims as his own invention, but which Alice recognizes as " I give thee all, I can no more ".
This is useful because the reeds eventually go out of tune through normal use, and certain notes of the scale can fail more quickly than others.
The tunes of a set will usually all be of the same sort, i. e. all jigs or all reels, although on rare occasions and amongst a more skilled group of players a complementary tune of a different sort will be included, such as a slip jig amongst the jigs.
In many ways his work was more in tune with Zürich Dada's championing of performance and abstract art than Berlin Dada's agit-prop approach, and indeed examples of his work were published in the last Zürich dada publication, der Zeltweg, November 1919, alongside the work of Arp and Sophie Tauber.
As each generation becomes more in tune with the Internet, their desire to retrieve information as quickly and easily as possible has increased.
These systems analyze the person's specific voice and use it to fine tune the recognition of that person's speech, resulting in more accurate transcription.
Thus, a high Q tuned circuit in a radio receiver would be more difficult to tune, but would have greater selectivity, it would do a better job of filtering out signals from other stations that lie nearby on the spectrum.
She introduced America to the suggestive version of the belly dance known as the " hootchy-kootchy ", to a tune said to be improvised by Sol Bloom ( and now more commonly associated with snake charmers ) which he had made as an improvision when his dancers had no music to dance to.
; Scales: While, as mentioned under Fingering, a player will usually play a given instrument only in its tonic key and possibly in the key beginning on the fourth ( e. g. G on a D whistle ), nearly any key is possible, becoming progressively more difficult to keep in tune as the player moves away from the whistle's tonic, according to the circle of fifths.
Proponents of this method argue that it makes it easier for each individual singer to hear and tune to the other parts, but it requires more independence from each singer.
Much more so than most non-English speaking European countries, the Netherlands has remained closely in tune with American and British trends ever since the 50's.
In 1868 he became editor of The Overland Monthly, another new literary magazine, but this one more in tune with the pioneering spirit of excitement in California.
Lewton promoted Wise to his superiors at RKO, beginning a collaboration which would produce the notable horror film The Body Snatcher starring Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff, a film which in its stylization and atmosphere deliberately evoked the groundbreaking horror films of the 1930s, while presenting a psychological horror film more in tune with the uncertainty of the 1940s.

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