How To Use Capriccio In A Sentence
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She has so far had15 records made of her Erhu playing, and also composed such works as Honghu Lake Theme Capriccio and tone poem Music from the Heart.
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Jacquet also appears to have been the first to use ‘capriccio’ as a musical title.
Archive 2009-06-01
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Juvarra's Dresden capriccio seems to present the ship from the downstream end, as it shows the projecting oar platforms found in representations of antique galleys and which are present in the ancient travertine and tufa prow.
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His Grozny, delicate as a doily, shows the ruins of the bombed Chechen capital dissolving in quavering sepia contours like an 18th-century capriccio.
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They would converge on the place each summer, moor their yachts in the limpid waters off Capriccioli or Cala di Volpe, and take it in turns to host parties on board or on beach.
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My inflamed eyes broadened as with a wise smirk and an abrupt halt, the master himself, for somehow I was certain, devolved his solemn requiem into the lively capriccio it had been born as.
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Meanwhile, the paintings increasingly assume the character of architectural capriccios.
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Akin to Dvorak's Scherzo capriccioso in many respects, it is even more full of harmonic daring.
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The F sharp minor Capriccio seethes with tension and urgency in its outer sections and the ensuing B minor Capriccio is delightfully playful and chipper.
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I didn't participate this capriccio , I had nothing to do with this matter.
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The Scherzo capriccioso, abridged in this recording in order to fit on two 78 rpm sides, was recorded with the Berlin Philharmonic in 1930.
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By the time he left he had written two symphonic preludes, a number of liturgical settings, and a Capriccio sinfonico, his passing-out piece, which won high critical acclaim.
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An architectural capriccio produced in Rome in 1704 reveals the topographical foundations of his invention.
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Rubies, set to Stravinsky's Capriccio For Piano And Orchestra, fast forwards to 20th-century America and a stageful of jazzy dancers.
This week's new theatre and dance
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Another of the Chatsworth capriccios introduces a new theme, a central feature embedded in an arcaded superstructure extending the length of the bridge.
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He inspired many substantial concertante works, including Lalo's Symphonie espagnole, Bruch's Violin Concerto no. 2 and Scottish Fantasy, and Saint-Saëns's Rondo capriccioso and Violin Concertos nos. 1 and 3.
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Track 15: 'Pasticcio capriccioso sopra op 64 #1 dello Chopin (' Minute Waltz ')' samplefile size will be 723280028 bytes. recording 4100.2266 seconds stereo with 16 bits @ 44100.0 Hz - >
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A strong presumption of topographical reference can be posited for this bridge, given that a capriccio in the same set is based on the Tiber Island.
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Alternatively, they can sketch or photograph several important objects in town and then make their own capriccios.
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It is likely, therefore, that the idea behind this capriccio is the Pons Triumphalis rather than the Pons Aelius.
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He trembled lest he should have been the plaything of a whim, for he had heard what a capriccio might mean in an
Albert Savarus
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The capriccio he selected to play for us bore a striking similarity to a cat with its bum on fire having a seizure on the piano keyboard - a painful experience for all concerned.
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The Scherzo capriccioso, abridged in this recording in order to fit on two 78 rpm sides, was recorded with the Berlin Philharmonic in 1930.
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This is not a 100% historically accurate rendering, by the way, just a little capriccio.
Veniceblog:
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A whirlwind final movement, allegro - andante - vivace molto capriccioso - with something of the feel of Bartók and Prokofiev, ends by quoting material from the earlier movements.
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A harpsichordist plays Bach's six-part capriccio in farewell to his brother, but her gloved fingers are drumming on sound-boxes.
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The Scherzo capriccioso sounded less rehearsed, and Alsop didn't do quite as much with the score as she did in the symphony.
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Not a strict depiction of an actual locale, it is more in the Italian tradition of the capriccio, or imaginary scene.
When They Were in Rome
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In painting, a capriccio is an architectural fantasy that combines various buildings, ruins, or landscape elements into an extravagant juxtaposition.
Capriccio in Art
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Cole painted this capriccio on commision for an architect famous for his Greek and Gothic Revival buildings, Ithiel Town.
Capriccio in Art
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The festival opened, for example, with the bright and lilting "Scherzo capriccioso," one of his best folksy programmatic pieces.
Chicago's Date With Dvorak
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Were it not that we attach, especially since Mendelssohn's time, the idea of lightness and light-heartedness to the word capriccio, this would certainly be the more descriptive name for the things Chopin entitled SCHERZO.
Frederic Chopin as a Man and Musician
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This was also the heyday of the "capriccio," or architectural and landscape fantasy, established by Marco Ricci and developed by Canaletto and Tiepolo.
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After 1783 he turned to less weighty genres aimed at the amateur solo player, producing keyboard sonatas, sonatinas, and capriccios, programme works, and towards the end of his life some contrapuntal teaching pieces.
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More than to any one of the master's scherzos, the name capriccio would be suitable to his third "Scherzo," Op. 39, with its capricious starts and changes, its rudderless drifting.
Frederic Chopin as a Man and Musician
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He was one of the first to attempt an extended setting of Ariosto; his Capriccio, a setting of 91 stanzas from Orlando furioso, is a striking example of his tendency to organize series of related texts into broad formal units.
Archive 2009-06-01
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Concertos were written for him, as also was the Introduction and Rondo capriccioso.
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Dvorak's Symphony No. 7 and Scherzo capriccioso are being recorded at the Meyerhoff for future release as part of a cycle of that composer's works the BSO and music director Marin Alsop have been making for the Naxos label.
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Moreover there are pieces of which the Liszt "Campanella," the Mendelssohn "Rondo Capriccioso" and the "Rosamunde" impromptu of Schubert, are examples, that, when played on the pianola by a musical person, sound just as well as if they came from under the fingers of the greatest living virtuoso -- possibly better.
The Pianolist A Guide for Pianola Players
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He had entranced me with the mere feeling of his sound, so much to the point that everything around me was mist, and every impulse which would have owned me was torturously overshadowed by the power of that capriccio.
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In a defensive capriccio of the period, the artist presents himself as a Venetian nobleman in a classical courtyard reminiscent of Sansovino's old library in Venice.
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Five years of hard study enabled her to appear at a concert at Marchiennes, when she played a concerto by De Beriot and the rondo capriccioso by Saint-Saens.
Famous Violinists of To-day and Yesterday