Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Perfect Harmony is an American musical comedy television series created by Lesley Wake Webster that aired on NBC from September 26, 2019 [1] to January 23, 2020. The series stars Bradley Whitford as Dr. Arthur Cochran who is a music director at a small church in the fictional town of Conley Fork, Kentucky and Anna Camp as Ginny who is a single mother and waitress, and is the leading choir member.
Perfect Harmony may refer to: Perfect Harmony, a 1991 Disney Channel film; Perfect Harmony, an a cappella stage musical; Perfect Harmony, a 1719 painting by Antoine Watteau; Perfect Harmony, an American musical comedy series; Perfect Harmony, a 1998 novel by Barbara Wood; Perfect Harmony: The Whiffenpoofs in China, a 1985 documentary by Megan ...
Perfect Harmony was written by Andrew Grosso [1] and developed along with The Essentials. Originally created as a workshop at the NYU Graduate Acting Studio Tisch program, Perfect Harmony premiered at FringeNYC (New York International Fringe Festival) in 2006, had an extended run at the Fringe Encore Series, [2] and in 2008 played Off-Off Broadway at the Clurman Theatre.
This page was last edited on 1 December 2024, at 02:34 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The studio group named themselves The Hillside Singers to identify with the ad, and within two weeks the song was on the national charts. The Hillside Singers' version reached #13 on the Billboard Hot 100, #5 on Billboard's Easy Listening chart and #58 on the RPM charts in Canada. [24] Billboard ranked this version as the No. 97 song for 1972.
Harmonie Ensemble/New York is a musical organization based in New York City that performs and records an eclectic repertoire ranging from classical to jazz. Founded in 1979 by its conductor, Steven Richman, HE/NY has performed orchestra, chamber orchestra, symphonic jazz, big band, chamber, and wind ensemble works in virtually all of New York's concert halls, including Carnegie Hall, Alice ...
Resolution has a strong basis in tonal music, since atonal music generally contains a more constant level of dissonance and lacks a tonal center to which to resolve.. The concept of "resolution", and the degree to which resolution is "expected", is contextual as to culture and historical period.
The term perfect has also been used as a synonym of just, to distinguish intervals tuned to ratios of small integers from those that are "tempered" or "imperfect" in various other tuning systems, such as equal temperament. [6] [7] The perfect unison has a pitch ratio 1:1, the perfect octave 2:1, the perfect fourth 4:3, and the perfect fifth 3:2.