How To Use Irving berlin In A Sentence
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Celebrated songwriter Irving Berlin initially wrote the song without thinking too deeply about it.
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She can project an Irving Berlin song onto the night sky like a constellation.
Times, Sunday Times
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If you want to play Irving Berlin, there is collected sheet music for his songs arranged for just about every instrument imaginable.
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She can project an Irving Berlin song onto the night sky like a constellation.
Times, Sunday Times
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The music of Irving Berlin is scarcely comparable to that of Beethove.
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If you ventured near a mailbox or post office Thursday, did you notice any brass bands playing John Philip Sousa medleys or Irving Berlin's God Bless America?
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Her rich alto also soared on American gems such as Van Morrison's "Moondance" and Irving Berlin's "Let's Face the Music and Dance" and Peggy Lee's megahit, "Fever.
In concert: Herb Alpert at the Birchmere
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She got nothing, for instance, out of the juxtaposition of "roaming" and "Romeo" in the verse of Irving Berlin's "I'm Putting All My Eggs in One Basket," a neat half-rhyme on which Fred Astaire for whom Berlin wrote the song never failed to put the sliest of spins.
March 2006
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Irving Berlin sailed in his beloved ark to the age of 101.
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A life-long penciller of rippling muscles and bosomy babes, he casually refers to Hamlet, Irving Berlin and Ira Gershwin as he describes a life's work in what is often seen as a trashy business.
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In the last decade of his life, composers such as Irving Berlin and Jerome Kern often solicited his services to write the ballet scores for elaborate dance routines in their revues or shows.
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A remake of the lilting Irving Berlin ditty Blue Skies began playing as the lights came up.
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For its self-referential abysms are only made darker by the thought that Rosemary Squires didn't pour her heart into this song: Irving Berlin did.
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The last wake-up call of the space shuttle mission was Kate Smith's version of Irving Berlin's "God Bless America.
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Irving Berlin loved America for giving a poor immigrant a chance to succeed.
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So he re - named himself Irving Berlin.
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She got nothing, for instance, out of the juxtaposition of "roaming" and "Romeo" in the verse of Irving Berlin's "I'm Putting All My Eggs in One Basket," a neat half-rhyme on which Fred Astaire for whom Berlin wrote the song never failed to put the sliest of spins.
It Ain't (Always) That Serious