How To Use Carillon In A Sentence

  • Women were still in cotton dresses and an ice-cream van, glad of the prolonged season, sounded its carillon as it passed them. THE GOSPEL MAKERS
  • AFTER lunch, he worked for a few bells more, marking time by the distant echo of the carillons that sounded faintly over the roofs of the City, for the nearest bell tower was several streets away, and had not paid its bell tax in some time. Tran Siberian
  • Herman Apple, ses carillons et ses percussions - J'ai vu maman embrasser le Père Noël Strange Christmas Sounds at radio Zwolle
  • The Nieuwe Kerk's carillon came streaming around me, and then the cold breezy air was filled with the celestial silvery noise of thousands of bells ringing out midday from all the towers and steeples of Delft.
  • Women were still in cotton dresses and an ice-cream van, glad of the prolonged season, sounded its carillon as it passed them. THE GOSPEL MAKERS
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  • Painful carillons sparked down the tunnel as the entire wall shattered under the blow. HOTHOUSE
  • The Carillon has compiled a brief biographical sketch of each of the candidates.
  • The hour-long recitals on the cathedral's 49-bell carillon will be given by the resident and guest carillonneurs.
  • But in the end, the only bell that mattered was the noontime carillon that brought workers in for their one hearty meal at home.
  • The Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial Carillon is the second-largest carillon in the world.
  • He blinked and shook his head, regretting it instantly as it rang like a carillon. T2©: RISING STORM
  • They began to sing in a strange unfamiliar tongue, swaying gently as they did, their voices rising in a high sweet chorus that vibrated through Kellen's body like the carillons of Armethalieh. Tran Siberian
  • I have several CDs of the device, the giant wooden cage with bronze bells hanging from them, played by massive keys pounded by the fists and feet: the carillon.
  • Other famous carillonneurs were Antoon Brees, Riverside Church of New York and Cranbrook Church in Detroit, and Camiel Lefevre of Bok Tower in Florida.
  • However, you are probably aware that churches and cathedrals have, and use carillons? Oxford Must Reject Islamic Call To Prayer – Update « Unambiguously Ambidextrous
  • Presiding over it all and exemplifying the liberal spirit is the imposing multi - faith Rockefeller chapel whose 72-bell carillon rings out grandly on summer nights.
  • Here, Enescu seems to be pushing Debussy's and Ravel's piano music into hyperspace, and not just with titles such as ‘Carillon nocturne,’ an eyebrow-raising yet gorgeous exercise in polytonality.
  • Finally, the negative comments against the English program in St Malo (as quoted in The Carillon a couple of weeks ago) is nothing short of an act of sabotage.
  • National Ave. Jon Lehrer, carillonist from New York, will perform in concert. Undefined
  • Police, fire and ambulance workers also led commemorations in Leeds' Millennium Square and Centenary Square, Bradford, where the town hall's Victorian carillon played The Star Spangled Banner.
  • The hour-long recitals on the cathedral's 49-bell carillon will be given by the resident and guest carillonneurs.
  • The festivities begin at 5 p.m., when Iowa State carillonneur Tin-shi Tam begins a pre-lighting concert.
  • Somehow "chinkling" reminds me of dirty metal (which is what coins are made of but maybe not carillons.) At Swim, One Ambassador
  • It is known, however, that the carillon of the cathedral was said to have played it in the eighteenth century.
  • The pinned barrel had been used from quite early times for carillons, and for musical clocks and boxes of all sizes, often incorporating organ pipes.
  • Although the itinerary has not been finalised she intends to show the conference delegates around some of the Bay's best examples, including the Veronica Bell and the Clive Square carillon bells.
  • He showed me the huge "tambour-carillon," with barrels all bestudded with little brass pegs which pull the wires connected with the great hammers, which in their turn strike the forty-six bells, that unrivaled chime known throughout Flanders as the master work of the Van den Gheyns of Vanished towers and chimes of Flanders
  • The 52-bell carillon in Ghent, Belgium, is 700 years old and was the largest in the world until it was surpassed in 1925 by the 53-bell carillon at the Park Avenue Baptist Church in New York City.
  • Students simulating minor injuries told The Carillon it had been an interesting experience.
  • What he saw was the thunder-lights lifting, and the bells pealing an urgent carillon as the glittering gold ship was spotted.
  • Cyril Johnston is credited as the man who rediscovered the art of bell tuning, an art form which had been lost for more than 200 years, and made the name of Gillett and Johnston synonomous with bells and carillons throughout the world.
  • Bronze carillon bells swung in wooden frames and bayed the hour like angry beasts. G'lder
  • There was a revival of interest in both the organ and the carillon; in addition, the region became a centre for music education, and was especially active in the rediscovery of early music.
  • I'd have used "chimed" which is what a carillon normally does. At Swim, One Ambassador
  • Handel makes delicious use of a carillon in the soprano aria ‘Or let the merry bells ring round’.
  • They visited many places of interest during their stay including the magnificent St Colman's Cathedral in Cobh which is constructed in a French Gothic style and has a carillon of 47 bells, one of the largest in these islands.
  • More than a century later, president James Verdin runs a $20-million company that produces clocks, bell and clock towers, glockenspiels, and - in a nod to the 21st century - digital electronic carillons.
  • This instrument, with more than 100 tons of bronze bells and 72 English-made bells, is so captivating that the world's top carillonneurs come to perform on it.
  • Prayer is one way to get you closer to God, but the Anglican Bishop of Grafton, Philip Huggins used more earthly means - a cherry picker to be precise - during Saturday's blessing of the new six-bell carillon at St Andrews Church.
  • Reilly Lewis leads the Cathedral Choral Society, the Maret School Concert Choir, organist Todd Fickley, carillonist Edward Nassor and the Washington Symphonic Brass in a program of holiday music, 4-6 p.m. D.C community calendar, Dec. 9 to 16, 2010
  • Toronto also marked the anniversary by featuring a coordinated 54-bell concert performed on carillons throughout the city, that was dramatically accompanied by candlelight. Mike Ragogna: A Post-Thanksgiving Cornucopia: World AIDS Day, The Birth of (RED)WIRE, Milk and Prop 8
  • Preceding it, ISU carillonneur Tin-shi Tam will provide music, and cookies and hot chocolate will be served.
  • In all of Canada there are only eleven true carillons, which must have at least 23 bells and must be played from a keyboard by a human being, not a machine.
  • He blinked and shook his head, regretting it instantly as it rang like a carillon. T2©: RISING STORM
  • The carillon originated in the 12th century in the Low Countries when people wanted not only to make beautiful bells, but also to achieve a sonorous and concordant sound.
  • The campus community will observe 10 minutes of silence at noon, followed by a 12: 10 p.m. carillon concert by ISU carillonneur Tin-shi Tam and a program from the front steps of Curtiss Hall.
  • But today my spirit was warmed and lifted by the unexpected tolling of the carillons for one transcendent moment.
  • There's a large number of carillons put in and never maintained.
  • the shattering tones of the enormous carillon
  • We look forward to a successful appeal, and hopefully in the not-too-distant future to hearing the melodious tones of the carillon once again.
  • The carillon system is unusual in that there are no bells.
  • In the 17th century scaled-down carillons are introduced into the drawing-room: the musical clock contains a row of bells which are played by a pro grammed cylinder just like the tower carillon.
  • At the bandstand in the magnificent Kennedy Gardens, Cobh Fraternity Band struck up concert music contrasting sharply with the more solemn 49 bell carillon of St Colman's Cathedral.
  • The base of the steeple in face brick, is surmounted by a circular campanile of columns which house the carillon system.

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