Word: limpid
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...sensuousness of the Requiem can easily swamp its melodic simplicity, but Charles Munch and the chorus avoided this pitfall perfectly. Munch emphasized heavily but tastefully the continual swelling and falling of dynamics, and the chorus maintained excellent clarity of voices to give their texture a limpid serenity...
Against the fine performances of all the principals, Farrell sang not only with her fabled power but with limpid clarity and velvety richness. If she still occasionally strained on top notes, she more than made up for it with the rich play of emotion that flooded her voice in her fourth-act aria, Suicidio. And she acted surprisingly well in a role that practically invites parody. Her Gioconda demonstrated that a truly distinguished Farrell performance at the Met requires only the combination of a good night and an opera with more than pretty tunes...
Yours of Sept. 7 an interesting issue-but who is that unidentified, undistinguished, limpid-looking old man on the cover...
...Mishima's vision. He is especially good at charting the whiplash currents of the Japanese temperament, swerving in an instant from refinement to cruelty. His tilt with tradition is spirited but distinctly un-Japanese. Since 1950, the Kinkakuji has been meticulously rebuilt, and may well gaze at its limpid image in the Kyoko Pond for another demi-millennium...
Margot Fonteyn-Dame Commander of the British Empire,* star of Covent Garden's Royal Ballet, top ballerina of the Western world-cast a large, limpid brown eye through her camera view finder and pressed the little button. A flashbulb's white glare froze a busy scene against the black of a tropic night on the Gulf of Panama, in the Pacific. Dame Margot's husband Roberto ("Tito") Arias-scion of one of Panama's 20-odd leading families and recently (1955-58) his nation's Ambassador to the Court of St. James...