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Turkish Folk Songs and Dances, by Nicholas Matthey and orchestra, is probably the most gratifying surprise of all the 150 albums Decca has released. Influenced by the melodies of Asia and North Africa, influencing the melodies of Eastern and Central Europe, Turkish music has everything from Bedouin thump to gypsy stomp. Notable in this collection is the weird and haunting Taxim, a harem dance which indicates that Rimsky-Korsakov and Tchaikovsky were not faking their Moslem themes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Feathered Kapp | 7/1/1940 | See Source »

...will go a long way toward revealing the strength and potentialities of the 1940 Harvard eleven. Tom Harmon may be the headliner, but Fritz Crialor has an all-veteran backfield and a strong line to go with him. And the ex-Princeton mentor wouldn't mine giving a little thump to the Harlowmen for the going over his Tigers took a few years...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SPORTS of the CRIMSON | 6/20/1940 | See Source »

...American continent, an Indian picked up a sea snail's shell, blew a tentative toot. He had a horn. Perhaps he did not catch on at once, but his horn was tuned naturally to a pentatonic (five-note) scale. The Indian and his friends contrived other instruments to thump and tootle with the snail's shell. By the time the Aztec civilization was at its height, and the Spaniards arrived in Mexico, the Indians were playing teponaxtles (wooden cylinders, with tongues inside producing two different notes), huehuetls (tree-trunk drums), pipes and flutes of clay, rattles and rasps...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Aztec Music, Reconstructed | 5/27/1940 | See Source »

...reconstruction called Xochi-pili-Macuilxochitl after the Aztec god of music, the dance, flowers, love-was the real stuff. But it really sounded like an Aztec jam session. Flutes and pipes shrilled and wailed, a trombone (subbing for the snail shell) neighed an angular melody, to the spine-tingling thump-and-throb of drums, gourds, rattles. Xochipili-Macuil-xochitl sounded almost as primitive as Stravinsky...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Aztec Music, Reconstructed | 5/27/1940 | See Source »

...Denver, Reginald Scott Dean of the U. S. Bureau of Mines held up pieces of steel and brass, dropped them on the floor. They clanged. Mr. Dean then dropped a piece of another metal. There was a faint thump. This "noiseless" metal, as strong and elastic as mild steel, is a heat-treated alloy of copper and manganese. "This," said Metallurgist Dean, "opens up many new possibilities-chatterless spring suspensions, noiseless gears, a muffler for a whole host of bothersome industrial sounds...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Technology Notes | 4/29/1940 | See Source »

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