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Word: tenore (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...30Crimson Concert Master: Prekofleff--Peter and the Wolf. 8:30 Piano Contest. 9:00 9 O'Clock Jump. 9:30 Harrison M. Rainie 1G, tenor. 9:45 Crimson Concert Hall: K. P. E. Bach--Concerto for Orchestra in D Major. Sibelius--Violin Concerto. 10:45 "Mother O'Toole, Biddie of Harvard"--skit. News...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CRIMSON NETWORK | 2/10/1941 | See Source »

...Rome the lines were the same, though the voice that sang them was tenor. In his weekly broadcast to the Italian armed forces Editor Giovanni Ansaldo of the Leghorn Telegrafo cried: "Roosevelt is not fighting to save England. He is fighting for American imperialism, since he wants to replace England with the United States as a world power. Today the United States is doing what England did up to the present conflict-she is ready to fight to her ally's last...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INTERNATIONAL: Divide and Rule | 2/10/1941 | See Source »

...terms of Adolf Hitler's new demands had come at last. They were not made public but their general tenor was known. Marshal Henri Philippe Pétain learned of them by telephone from his Ambassador to Paris, Count Fernand de Brinon. They were harsher than the old Marshal had expected. Not only did Hitler want the restitution of Pierre Laval to power to insure the "collaboration" he demands, not only did he want passage for German troops across Tunisia for an attack on the British in Libya (TIME, Feb. 3), but he also now wanted to occupy Mediterranean...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: The Marshal Gets the News | 2/10/1941 | See Source »

More persuasive was the Pelléas which Maeterlinck and his chic, 46-year-old wife (Renée Dahon, actress) witnessed last week. The young, hard-working Philadelphia Opera Company made Maeterlinck's dreamy medieval play completely believable, with Tenor John Toms and Soprano Frances Greer a handsome pair of lovers. As he had promised, Maeterlinck sat it through to the end. He had refused to promise to applaud...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Maeterlinck Goes to the Opera | 2/10/1941 | See Source »

...ordinary pop tune. They open it with a light, bouncing piano chorus, and then Fats gives a vocal burlesque of the phoney Broadway sentiment voiced in the lyrics. After everybody digs a bit more, Gene Cedric (who, incidentally, is probably the most unappreciated jazz musician alive), slips in a tenor ride passage and Herman Autrey a trumpet. Finally, Fats takes the release, and by the time everybody else comes in for a terrific finish on the last eight bars, the tune is properly murdered. And I don't know of any small band that can take a finish...

Author: By Charles Miller, | Title: SWING | 2/8/1941 | See Source »

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