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Yet the texture is light, with the voices singing polyphonically only some of the time.
The ideology of the book is thus presented polyphonically.
Alberti's Passions were the first to set Jesus' words polyphonically.
The late Baroque style was polyphonically complex and ornamental and rich in its melodies.
Ms. Rudner often sets them polyphonically, so that we're watching up to eight separate phrases at one time.
Works could then be conceived polyphonically, and thus each head conveyed a part of the information and was listened to through a dedicated loudspeaker.
What makes the novel work particularly well is that Miss Livesey has introduced, almost polyphonically, three levels of suspense.
Through-composed Passions, also called motet Passions, in which all text is set polyphonically.
Not only did he contribute to polyphonic playing, but he also discovered new idiomatic ways to compose polyphonically conceived violin music.
He sets the words of Christ and the narration of the Evangelist as chant, while setting the passages for groups polyphonically.
A novelty are the distinct crescendo and diminuendo signs allocated "polyphonically" and sometimes even differing in the two voices played by the right hand.
"What I tried to do with this round of Bach suites was to be more courageous in identifying how Bach worked things out polyphonically.
The musical items not set polyphonically by Vásquez would have been performed using their original plainchant, possibly with improvised polyphony.
Messiaen found ways of employing all of the modes of limited transposition harmonically, melodically, and sometimes polyphonically.
Responsorial Passions in which the narration is chanted but the turba parts and sometimes Christ's words are set polyphonically.
Groven often thinks rather polyphonically, and this can also be traced to the hardanger fiddle, as well as to his admiration for Bach.
It is more suitable for playing polyphonically, with separate musical lines, or separate melody, harmony and bass, and therefore more suitable to unaccompanied soloing.
The early madrigal was simpler than the more well-known later madrigals, usually consisting of tercets arranged polyphonically for two voices, with a refrain called a ritornello.
Tatum took the Harlem stride style of Fats Waller and reinvented it, pushing it harmonically, polyphonically and pianistically beyond anything imagined.
A number of her compositions have been arranged polyphonically, while her works are performed throughout Turkey by various choirs, as well as being rendered on radio stations and television channels.
Today, fingerstyle jazz guitar has several proponents: the pianistic Jeff Linsky (b. 1952), freely improvises polyphonically while employing a classical guitar technique.
The divide-down oscillator architecture, based on vacuum-tube monostable circuits, permitted all 72 notes to be played polyphonically by deriving several octaves of notes from twelve top-octave oscillators.
Even so, polyphonically and melodically, Kálmán was a devoted follower of Giacomo Puccini, while in his orchestration methods he employed principles characteristic of Tchaikovsky's music.
To put these ideas into practice, Sethares (with collaborators and students) developed a freely available software-based synthesizer, the TransFormSynth, which enables a performer to bend tunings polyphonically during performance.
The Pasibutbut is a song of Bunun Sowing Festival, sung polyphonically in four-part harmony (Common 8 heterophonic voice, usually 5-12 heterophonic voices).