Download

How To Use Balladeer In A Sentence

  • Kind of, but I've become more sensitive to the balladeers, really.
  • The balladeer's 1999 announcement that he would never tour again because of heart problems was premature, as last year's album Live at Vicar Street proved.
  • To remedy that, and give one last nod to summer, here's one of Gershwin's most famous songs, recorded by crooners and rockers, rappers and balladeers: Summertime.
  • A great political balladeer, he is at his superb best when singing melancholy personal ditties, with that soulful voice and tuneful guitar.
  • The self titled album contained a selection of twelve songs which eschewed the power and fury of traditional Irish balladeers for a more gentle, haunting and delicate style.
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
Fix common errors and boost your confidence in every sentence.
Get started
for free
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
  • There are balladeers; there are hey nonny nonnies; there are men in tights. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their music is recognised worldwide and their talent as balladeers is limitless.
  • But right now he needs to decide whether he wants to be a balladeer or a singing anatomist.
  • It is something that the balladeer likes to refer to as his ‘music-documentary.’
  • Songdog's delivery of music and lyric is reminiscent of the old-school '70s singer/songwriter balladeers such as Nick Drake, Jim Croce and at times, Tom Waits.
  • She could make introspective songs like "Funny How Time Slips Away" and "Sometimes When We Touch" her own but since Tina Turner was not known as a balladeer, United Artists refrained from working that angle of the album. PopMatters
  • It contrasts Cash, frail and grey, with Cash the gunslinger, the prison poet, the railroad balladeer.
  • a balladeer is a Dutch band, originating from Amsterdam, formed around singer-songwriter Marinus de Goederen. AvaxHome RSS:
  • Folky guitar strummers, pop balladeers and jazz groups still prefer quiet, seated audiences.
  • Most people, says one fan of the '80s R&B balladeer, would shut down, would be content to live out their lives offstage, out of the spotlight, wherever it is that old singers go to fade away. Jazz singer Angela Bofill makes a comeback without voice that made her famous
  • The role as village balladeer is one that Wordsworth and Hawthorne assume in these works. Wordsworth, the _Lyrical Ballads_, and Literary and Social Reform in Nineteenth Century America
  • Among the clamorous was his old friend and fellow balladeer, Bret Harte. The Five of Hearts
  • In an era overdependent on normcore balladeers, this is potentially great. Times, Sunday Times
  • The magazine is also where he found his peculiar romantic voice, bittersweet and darkly amusing, like a balladeer serenading a wall.
  • Other musical events will include crossroads dancing and a concert by the very popular balladeers Celtic Clan.
  • From chamber choirs to traditional balladeers, Newfoundland musicians are confidently rooted in local culture
  • It's true that I'm not known as a crooner or balladeer," says Elling. News from www.pantagraph.com
  • I despised my father's groaning old balladeers.
  • As for Chris Brown, he is a romantic balladeer, which is why his misogynist behavior is so controversial. The American Spectator
  • I think of Mr. Miller primarily as a hard-bopper and a purely rhythmic player, but his lovely, impressionistic reading of Henry Mancini 's "Dreamsville" shows that he's also a master balladeer when he chooses to be. Piano Perspectives, Visions of Vaudeville
  • Stoll is a supple balladeer whose raw vocal wanderings set against harmonic guitar-strummings make great theme music for your introspective mood.
  • And it's also the birthplace of Banjo Paterson - a balladeer with a romantic inclination when it came to immortalising the bush and its inhabitants.
  • No longer would courtly ladies be gently serenaded by love-struck balladeers - The Taming Of The Shrew threw out any notion of wooing and replaced it with a more martial one.
  • This annual Shaw-curated season at the Pizza Express features a typically wide-ranging lineup, from his partnership with Gwyneth Herbert on a tribute to Joni Mitchell and Fran Landesman (Tue), to collaborations with multi-lingual balladeer Tina May (Wed), soul star Linda Lewis (Thu), and Fairground Attraction singer Eddi Reader (Fri). This week's new live music
  • The balladeer, who connects and comments on the show's segments, ‘is the only voice of reason to the eyes of the audience.’
  • I apologise to any purists in case the following suggestion is seen as something of a sacrilege, but can I ask you to help us in calling all Yorkshire poets, rhymesters, bards, balladeers and singers to help us save our pub?
  • Beck's work on IRM carries over into four songs – Terrible Angels and Paradisco offer a kind of oscillating glam-funk that goes perfectly with Gainsbourg's clipped, blank vocal style, while All the Rain and White Telephone reimagine her as a 70s balladeer, with an intriguing timelessness emerging. Charlotte Gainsbourg: Stage Whisper – review
  • The E.N.D. One wonders if this song's path to the top is as inevitable as previously thought, as the iTunes Store right now is selling the full-length for the reduced price of $7. 99-but then again, radio programmers seem to have a bit of a thing for the vocal stylings of Ms. Fergalicious when she's in "balladeer" mode, so expect to hear this track a lot at your local Walgreen's by the time that Halloween candy goes on deep discount. Idolator
  • One of the ways in which the ballad was disseminated was through public performance in the streets by balladeers, who might also sell copies of the songs, printed on broadsides.
  • Even Homer, the balladeer, was a Turk, living most of his life in Izmir (Smyrna).
  • Though Manilow is best known as a balladeer, he showed off a few dance moves throughout the Spinner
  • In an era overdependent on normcore balladeers, this is potentially great. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her voice sang in perfect harmony with her instrument, and her heart throbbed with the pulse of a true balladeer.
  • Crooners, balladeers, torch singers - they are all here on this triple CD.
  • With the invention of print, minstrels in their medieval form largely disappeared, becoming balladeers selling broadsheets of their songs and singing to advertise their wares, or stage-players.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):