Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Lisa plays the baritone saxophone, but according to Matt Groening, "she doesn't always play a baritone sax because the animators don't know what it looks like, so it changes shape and color from show to show." [18] After the switch to HD production, Lisa has also occasionally performed her solo on an instrument other than the saxophone.
Lisa is saddened as she realizes she does not know everything about Bleeding Gums Murphy. To learn more about Murphy, Lisa visits Murphy's son, Monk, and discovers that he was born deaf. Although Murphy wanted a cochlear implant for his son, he could not afford one. Monk continues to want the implant but cannot afford it himself.
Lisa Marie Simpson [1] is a fictional character in the animated television sitcom series The Simpsons.She is the middle child of the Simpson family.Voiced by Yeardley Smith, Lisa was born as a character in The Tracey Ullman Show short "Good Night" on April 19, 1987.
The bandleader of The Spotted Cat, a jazz bar Lisa and Homer go in, calls Lisa by name, actually being "Bleeding Gums" Murphy's nephew, the deceased jazzman (whose name was apparently Oscar) telling him that Lisa was the most promising musician he knew (much to his nephew's chagrin). He finally convinces Lisa to play his sax in spite of her ...
A person who plays a pedal harp is called a "harpist"; [61] a person who plays a folk-harp is called a "harper" or sometimes a "harpist"; [62] either may be called a "harp-player", and the distinctions are not strict. A number of instruments that are not harps are none-the-less colloquially referred to as "harps".
Double and triple harps continued to be the norm throughout the Baroque era in Italy, Spain, and France and were employed both as solo and continuo instruments. The most famous surviving example of an Italian triple harp is the Barberini harp. The instrument was built between 1605 and 1620 for the Barberini family and was played by Marco ...
Three Duos concertants for harp and piano; No. 1 in B flat, C. 234 (1810) No. 2 in E flat, C. 239 (1811) No. 3 in F, C. 243 (1811) Vladimír Godár. Barcarolle, for violin (or cello), strings, harp and harpsichord (1993/1995) La Canzona refrigerativa dell arpa di Davide (David's Refreshing Harp Song), for cello & harp (1999) Sofia Gubaidulina
A trio is a composition for three performers or musical parts. Works include Baroque trio sonatas, choral works for three parts, and works for three instruments such as string trios. In the trio sonata, a popular genre of the 17th and early 18th century, two melodic instruments are accompanied by a basso continuo, making three parts in all.