Word: rhythm
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...affirming chord. Igor Stravinsky’s “Symphony in Three Movements” was next, continuing the feeling of locomotion that “Flying Machine” had established. Despite shaky intonation at the beginning of the piece, the orchestra played with appropriately dry, exact rhythm, supported by the remarkably pure tone of the French horns. The first clarinet (Billy T. Marks ’11) delivered a nuanced solo, and the orchestra maneuvered quick changes from quick rhythmic jabs to charming, almost sarcastic melodic sections. The second movement began with a sweet, floating melody, with...
...first two periods alone, Harvard posted nine penalties and killed all but one. While the Crimson came out ahead, the numerous penalties certainly disrupted the flow of the offensive line.“We felt that we weren’t really able to get in a good rhythm, because we were short-handed so much,” Donato said. “I just told them to stay with it and really try to establish our forecheck and use our speed off the rush. I think we were able to do that in the third period [Pier-Olivier...
...When McCain first delivered those lines in his convention speech, he seemed to struggle with the rhythm. Salter, his speechwriter and adviser, sat in the front row at the convention hall urging McCain not to stop the delivery as the crowd noise built. Today, McCain delivers the same words with a verve and confidence that seemed previously lacking. He enters the final 96 hours of the campaign facing down extraordinary headwinds, aiming for one of the most unlikely electoral upsets in U.S. history. It is the underdog position that McCain has long embraced, and the old warrior shows no sign...
...forcing Murray to make saves up until the final minute.Clark was pleased with the way Harvard bounced back in the second half, attempting as many shots (9) in 45 minutes as Providence did the entire game.“The first half we didn’t have a rhythm. They clogged up the middle and we weren’t willing to go wide,” Clark said. “We really wanted to start opening the game up…I’m very happy with the second half.”Also noteworthy...
...Great songwriters don’t always follow the rules,” and he said “Good, I’ll go with that.” He is much better musically than lyrically, carrying an acoustic-y vibe throughout despite some funky experimentation in the rhythm section and a foray into reggae (the album’s first single, “Make You Crazy”). When the lyrics are plodding and over-deliberate, a surprise guitar lick or nice chord progression on the piano keeps things from getting too dull. The sound is thoroughly...