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Word: unevennesses (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...into a theatrical setting by realizing that "lights, color, and costume" all play a role. "And if they choose not to use them, then that is a decision too." But can artistic choice really explain all the technical simplicities of the company's production? Mallardi herself says that the uneven cello and piano accompaniment to "Cresence" might have been re-recorded, but the group didn't have the money...

Author: By Diane Sherlock, | Title: Falls The Shadow | 5/13/1976 | See Source »

...eminently listenable album, Black and Blue is however uneven and often lazy; throughout there is a sense that the Stones lack real commitment to their music. Considering the near eighteen months this album took in the making, one would expect a musically tighter, more unified work. Traditionally, the Stones' special talent has been for infusing their material with a tremendous, yet controlled energy, but this quality more than anything else is missing from Black and Blue...

Author: By Margaret ANN Hamburg, | Title: Black and Blue | 5/10/1976 | See Source »

...ballplayers' salaries since 1923, the original façade was melted down and sold. Perhaps it is now plumbing in a renovated brownstone. The playing surface is still alive: Merion blue grass, in texture irregular enough to promise a few historic bounces and in color a nice uneven biological green...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A NEW LOOK FOR THE OLD BALL GAME | 4/26/1976 | See Source »

...this time you've gone too far-even for you.' But it worked. It was funny." So funny that the New York Times's critic called it "ten minutes of the most hilarious TV that is likely to be seen this year." The scripts may be uneven, but the show boasts an infectiously loopy cast headed by the irresistibly dolorous Louise Lasser, whose Mary is a birdbrain worthy of Audubon, and Greg Mullavey as her flaccid husband...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: King Lear | 4/5/1976 | See Source »

...from Communism is a curiously uneven book, a mixture, on one hand, of impeccable scholarship and, on the other, easy simplifications that skirt the issues raised by such conversions. The basic flaw is that Diggins finds himself unable to achieve a serious interpretation of the intellectual evolution of these four men, due to his own preoccupation with the politics of the sixties and seventies. Unable to distinguish these intellectual conservatives from the likes of Nixon, he ends by trying to subtly discredit them. If it is true, as one former radical said, that "the final struggle will be between...

Author: By Stephen J. Chapman, | Title: Renegades from Radicalism | 3/26/1976 | See Source »

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