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Word: sound (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...York Times trotted out the kind of headlines usually reserved for war or disaster. Cried a Chicago lawyer: "This court is unanalytical; it's vicious, it's stupid, it's illiterate, it's subjective." Retorted a California judge: "The decisions are sound and timely. The trials of Communists here are comparable only to the trial of Cardinal Mindszenty in Hungary. Neither should have taken place...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE SUPREME COURT: The Temple Builder | 7/1/1957 | See Source »

Wild Rhythms. In his early works, Firebird and Petrouchka, he galvanized and repelled his audiences with wild rhythms, brutal harmonies, and kaleidoscopic tone coloring of a kind they had never heard or imagined before. The Rite of Spring unleashed a cacophony of sound that set its first Paris audience to pummeling one another with fists and canes. But within a mere ten years all three works were becoming accepted in the contemporary musical language, and Stravinsky boldly moved on to a new, dry, precisely turned style-Pulcinella, Oedipus Rex, Apollon Musagetes-that had little relation to the earlier, gaudily splashed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Old Revolutionary | 6/24/1957 | See Source »

Throughout, the deep, ringing speaking voice of Moses and the soaring tenor of Aaron were heard simultaneously. The orchestra played in a web of complicated polyphony, and the chorus sang in as many as twelve parts. Some found the rainbow shower of sound to their liking; others were puzzled and distracted, wondered whether the oratorio-like work was an opera at all. But Paris' Le Monde called it a miracle. The Neue Züricher Zeitung found the score "an ingenious summary of all that makes Schoenberg the founder of a new musical language." That language-like the words...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: New Exodus | 6/24/1957 | See Source »

...best new twist along the radio dial is bringing listeners in growing numbers to little (5,000 watts) WPAT in Paterson, N.J., and making it one of the most popular stations in the New York metropolitan area. The station's simple yet radical idea: spare the listener the sound of the human voice, except at decent intervals, i.e., no oftener than every 15 minutes through the day and every half-hour in the evening. In between. WPAT. plays carefully chosen, well-groomed music, mostly the massed strings and muted brass of the Mantovani-Kostelanetz style, nothing more popular than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Soothing Savage Listeners | 6/24/1957 | See Source »

Each day at dawn an explosion of sound reverberates through the hills above California's Carquinez Strait, 30 miles up San Pablo Bay from San Francisco and the Golden Gate. At the sandy tip of a new superhighway pushing across the hills from Richmond to the industrial town of Crockett, an army of mammoth machines comes noisily to life; their motors growl and their exhausts spout blue fumes into the mountain air. Tough, broadnosed bulldozers hungrily tear up the soil; potbellied scrapers scoop and level it; lumbering compact-ers press it down with their massive weight. Directly before...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CONSTRUCTION: March of the Monsters | 6/24/1957 | See Source »

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