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Toscanini

[ US /ˌtɔskəˈnini/ ]
NOUN
  1. Italian conductor of many orchestras worldwide (1867-1957)

How To Use Toscanini In A Sentence

  • Within 18 months, he had fallen in love with a pretty, quick-witted copygirl, Barbara Stone, and after a terrifying, if occasionally thrilling, baptism of snootiness by her family — New Year’s at Arturo Toscanini’s house, a frightening experience with a finger bowl — he married her. The Gelb Family
  • He is a polemic historian who means to show us, as he did in his acclaimed Understanding Toscanini, just what went wrong in classical music.
  • But I can't say the same about Toscanini, whose lessons have apparently been learned and naturalized only too well and whose style is more easily imitated than the art and timbre of a great voice or soloist.
  • Toscanini's sense of theater allows them to remain gripping, even at slowish tempos, and the NBC Symphony Orchestra plays them with superhuman concentration.
  • The most famous Italians of the period were performers: the conductor Arturo Toscanini and the tenor Enrico Caruso.
  • Our next foray into the menu was a wild mushroom cream soup with Toscanini truffle oil and garlic flakes.
  • With no subsidiary, secondary accentuation implied, Toscanini forces you to confront the very nature of speed.
  • The culprits entered, pulled open a grate to the underground chamber, but ignored Toscanini's coffin.
  • He is a phenomenon of the podium, an immigrant kid who first raised a baton for Toscanini at the age of seven and has since conducted 5,000 performances.
  • As it happens, this passage was quoted in its entirety by the reviewer in Columbia Spectator, who added that to verify the "exactitude" of the description one needed only to listen to a Toscanini performance. Critic
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