Word: fusionã
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...Through albums like “In A Silent Way” and “Filles de Kilimanjaro” the group fused the abstract, single-chord song forms of free jazz with the electric instruments of funk and rock, creating a sub-genre called “fusion?? that held tremendous sway during the 1970s and 80s. Hancock left Davis’ group in 1968 and began a long experimental relationship with funk music. This relationship reached its peak in 1973 with the album “Headhunters,” whose opener...
...jazz world—a super-group of instrumental greats. Formed when saxophonist Wayne Shorter and pianist/composer Joe Zawinul left their prestigious positions in the Miles Davis quintet, the group, whose roster featured an ever-changing list of talented sidemen, began experimenting with the possibilities of jazz fusion??a bold mixture of rock music, funk, soul, and world music. In pursuing Davis’ experimental leanings as displayed on “In A Sentimental Mood” and “Bitches Brew,” the group created some of the most innovative and dynamic jazz...
...members and an abstract landscape he painted late in his career.Wolohojian did not suggest a specific path viewers should take through the three modest-sized rooms of the exhibit; navigating the gallery chronologically or thematically is not necessary. What is important is that viewers appreciate Degas’ artistic fusion??the way images and techniques in his work recur, evolve, and interact.The exhibit, Wolohojian explains, is arranged to make this fusion easier to see and appreciate. Degas’ statues of ballet dancers are placed at the same level as drawings of girls in the exact same poses...
...letter to the editor ("Hoxby Misrepresented In Article on Academic Debate,” July 15), Brigitte C. Madrian wrote, “This is not like the ‘cold fusion?? debate of the 1980s in which a highly acclaimed finding, published in one paper, was subsequently invalidated...
...Princeton Professor Jesse M. Rothstein ’95 focused so much on the personal aspects of the disagreement and so little on its scholarly impact which was the substantive nature of my conversation with Crimson reporter Javier C. Hernandez. This is not like the “cold fusion?? debate of the 1980s in which a highly acclaimed finding, published in one paper, was subsequently invalidated...