enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Performance poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Performance_poetry

    Ginsberg put William Blake's poems to music and performed them with the harmonium. Even though the Beats did not use the term "Performance Poetry" to categorize their work with music and audio recordings, the Beats provided an immediate model for the work of Hedwig Gorski. She is a Nova Scotia College of Art and Design art school graduate in 1976.

  3. List of program music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_program_music

    Liszt is considered the inventor of the symphonic poem and his programmatic orchestral works set the framework for several composers of the romantic era. He composed a total of thirteen symphonic poems as well as two programmatic symphonies, drawing his inspiration from a variety of literary, mythological, historical and artistic sources.

  4. Jazz Chants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jazz_Chants

    Echols (1996:327) states that chant means simple and short songs. So Jazz Chants is the technique to practice the English utterances in short jazz beats that is easy to be followed by the students. As we know that the teaching and learning process is a complex phenomenon that involves many components and competencies, including words, mind, and ...

  5. List of songs based on poems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_songs_based_on_poems

    "Ten Blake Songs" are poems from Blake's "Songs of Innocence and of Experience" and "Auguries of Innocence", set to music by Ralph Vaughan Williams in 1957. "Tyger" is both the name of an album by Tangerine Dream, which is based on Blake's poetry, and the title of a song on this album based on the poem of the same name.

  6. Ich am of Irlaunde - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ich_am_of_Irlaunde

    Ich am of Irlaunde", sometimes known as "The Irish Dancer", [1] is a short anonymous Middle English dance-song, possibly fragmentary, dating from the early 14th century, in which an Irish woman issues an invitation to come and daunce wit me in Irlaunde. The original music for this song is now lost.

  7. Danse macabre (Saint-Saëns) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danse_macabre_(Saint-Saëns)

    Danse macabre is scored for an obbligato violin and an orchestra consisting of one piccolo, two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets in B ♭, two bassoons; four horns in G and D, two trumpets in D, three trombones, one tuba; a percussion section that includes timpani, xylophone, bass drum, cymbals and triangle; one harp and strings.

  8. Danny Deever - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny_Deever

    Later that year, a first volume of the poems was published as Departmental Ditties, and a volume of short stories, Plain Tales from the Hills, followed in 1887. [2] He continued to write at a rapid rate, publishing in a number of different papers and, in 1888, the Indian Railway Library series published five new volumes of short stories plus a ...

  9. Dub poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dub_poetry

    Dub poetry has been a vehicle for political and social commentary, [7] with none of the braggadocio often associated with the dancehall. The odd love-song or elegy appears, but dub poetry is predominantly concerned with politics and social justice, commonly voiced through a commentary on current events (thus sharing these elements with dancehall and "conscious" or "roots" reggae music).