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Word: tunings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

Sung to the tune of Chuck Berry's "School Days," "Dirty Old Man" is a riotous parody, a reductio ad absurdum of the other side's stereotype of the Fug-like hippie, the bearded beatnik with "thrill pills for all you chickies, funny cigarettes for you boys...

Author: By John D. Reed, | Title: The Fugs | 3/25/1967 | See Source »

Time was you could write a review of the Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra without attending a concert. The violins would be out of tune, the clarinets would screech, and the strings and winds would cheerfully experiment with the tempo. No more: or at any rate, a lot less. The HRO still has its persistent problems--most distressingly, an inability, especially among the winds, to play really softly--but last Saturday's concert showed that the orchestra is getting there...

Author: By Robert S. Coren, | Title: HRO | 3/6/1967 | See Source »

...used to spell disaster for the strings were clean, and the horns were the best I've ever heard them. But the performance as a whole was dead; the woodwinds trod on the opening with an expressionless mezzo-forte, one passage of rich string chords was painfully out of tune, and Yannatos' overall interpretation was too straight. He seemed to have little interest in bringing out Tchaikovsky's natural schmaltz. With that sort of attitude, he probably shouldn't have performed Tchaikovsky...

Author: By Robert S. Coren, | Title: HRO | 3/6/1967 | See Source »

...note at the bottom of the program announces that the concert was recorded for eventual radio broadcast by WGBH. A broadcast can hardly substitute for a live performance, but anyone who missed the concert Saturday would still do well to tune...

Author: By Robert S. Coren, | Title: The Cantata Singers | 2/13/1967 | See Source »

...mixture of common sense and doctrinaire Pestering. He believes that capitalism is "on the defensive" and distrusts the "North Atlantic Protestant atmosphere" that favors private initiative. "Only totalitarianism and Communist compulsion," he says, "have succeeded in lifting poverty-stricken countries onto the road of progressive improvement." Balogh's tune has hardly changed a note since the early postwar era, when he proclaimed confidently that only the long continuance of direct economic controls could restore Europe's prosperity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Prescription for the Poor | 1/20/1967 | See Source »

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