Word: foreing
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...wonderful job of layering different elements, but occasionally, mixing too many ideas works to the detriment of the song as a whole. Take “Armchairs.” Bird begins with a slow wash of sound, which grows and changes slightly as piano comes to the fore. The song turns to lounge jazz, and then the song goes big at the end, crashing and bold—and then, nearly six minutes in, the rhythm shifts to make it sound like another song. The multidimensionality of it all, the beauty in both the background and the foreground...
...make a difference [April 9]. In my workplace, a green proponent started a campaign to do away with paper cups and get everyone to use coffee mugs. While convenience will take precedence over environmental correctness more often than not, it is heartening to see such issues come to the fore. There will come a day when TIME insists that letters to the editor be sent only by e-mail...
...which industry and business could flourish." But Labour lost elections in 1987 and again in 1992, when it was defeated by the unpopular Tory government of John Major, itself mired in accusations of sleaze. Katwala calls that last outcome "astonishingly traumatic," and Labour's coming generation--Blair to the fore--set about ensuring that the party could never again sink so low. The result, says Katwala: "a degree of overcompensation" in the courtship of the business vote--and its cash...
Could this change as a new generation of politicians comes to the fore? Both main presidential candidates - Ségolène Royal and Nicolas Sarkozy - are just 50, but have been in politics for 30 years. Their problem will be to prevent their parties, which are still partly living in the past, from laying down...
...practice, we’ve been focusing on specific breakouts to beat their fore-check,” Sifers said. “They like to crash down on the wings, and we want to make sure we’re open so that we can do a variety of things...