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Macedonian rock music groups (1 C, 20 P) Pages in category "Macedonian musical groups" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.
Pages in category "Macedonian rock music groups" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Clarinetist and composer Tale Ognenovski. [4] Ognenovski performed with Tanec during their 1956 66-date tour of United States of America and Canada.[5] [6] As a clarinet he performed the Macedonian folk dances Zhensko Chamche and Beranche in Vardar Film’s 1955 production of Ritam i zvuk (Rhythm and Sound).
Mirče Acev, a Macedonian organizer of the Yugoslav communist resistance in Vardar Macedonia during World War II Mihailo Apostolski, a macedonian commander of the General Staff of the National Liberation Army and Partisan Detachments of Macedonia. Mirče Acev (1915–1943) [6] Mihajlo Apostolski (1906–1987)
The music of the Balkans is known for complex rhythms. Macedonian music exemplifies this trait. Folk songs like "Pomnish li, libe Todoro" (Помниш ли, либе Тодоро) can have rhythms as complex as 22/16, divided by stanza to 2+2+3+2+2+3+2+2+2+2, a combination of the two common meters 11=2+2+3+2+2 and 11=3+2+2+2+2 (sheet music).
Excavations in Macedonia have discovered musical instruments similar to the aulos as early as the Neolithic Era and throughout classical antiquity. The Ancient Macedonians enjoyed similar music to the rest of the Ancient Greeks and Alexander the Great and his successors built odea for musical performances in every city they built, from Alexandria in Egypt to cities as distant as Ai-Khanoum in ...
Hippolochus (early 3rd century BC) description of a Macedonian wedding feast; Poseidippus of Cassandreia (c. 288 BC) comic poet; Poseidippus of Pella (c. 280 BC–240 BC) epigrammatic poet; Amerias (3rd century BC) lexicographer; Craterus (historian) (3rd century BC) anthologist, compiler of historical documents relative to the history of Attica
A new religious movement (NRM) is a religious or spiritual group or community with practices of relatively modern [clarification needed] origins. NRMs may be novel in origin or they may exist on the fringes of a wider religion, in which case they will be distinct from pre-existing denominations.