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Word: timpani (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Stravinsky built Noah's Ark with flutes, French horns, and thumping timpani that seemed to pound every wooden board in place. He created the flood with wavy strings and the liquid tone of horns and string basses. His storm was disconcerting dissonance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Igor's Flood | 6/22/1962 | See Source »

...objects," and has been described as "a confusion of actual meteorological conditions with the weather in the soul." Any moviegoer or TV watcher-dimly aware that acts of love seem to occur in the presence of windblown oatfields or sexily curling surf, and that crises seldom take place without timpani and brass on the sound track-is the plaything of the pathetic fallacy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Rhetoric for Everybody | 2/3/1961 | See Source »

...fill the gigantic mold of a Wagnerian hero, a tenor should 1) have a voice big enough and resonant enough to soar over the timpani-tempered Wagnerian orchestra, 2) be robust enough to support swooning Wagnerian sopranos, and 3) preferably be named Lauritz Melchior. At the Metropolitan Opera last week, a topnotch revival of Wagner's Die Walkuere (conducted by Karl Boehm) offered the audience a dramatic tenor who ideally fulfilled the first two requirements and made the third one seem unimportant. The tenor: 33-year-old, Canadian-born Jon Vickers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: The Reluctant Heldentenor | 2/22/1960 | See Source »

...prosaic love triangle is established on a remote banana plantation-a planter (the book's nameless narrator), his wife and a neighboring plantation owner. If this were one of Paul Bowles's African novels of sin and sun, the weather would cloud up on cue, providing a timpani accompaniment to the heroine's rages. Robbe-Grillet cheerfully invents a greater fault. Obsessed by the reality of objects, he describes them endlessly, and then repeats his descriptions-a column that casts a shadow, a squashed centipede, the location of a window, of a garden. In one maddening three...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Surface Without Depth | 12/14/1959 | See Source »

Professor Harold C. Schmidt, director of the chorus, has announced that the Mozart work requires a small orchestra of woodwinds, trombones, timpani, and strings. Interested parties may contact him at the Music Building, extension 2791, or in Sever 11 on Tuesday and Thursday evenings...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Summer Chorus | 7/16/1959 | See Source »

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