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"choreography" - 5 õppematerjali

Ballet
14
pptx

Ballet

the epicentre moved to France obligatory component of opera Mlle La Fontaine 1681 St. Petersburg ballet reanimated in western Europe Styles Romantic ballet mid 19th century emphasized intense emotion most widely known and performed ● Classical ballet ○ based on technique and vocabulary ○ different styles ○ height in 19th century Neoclassical ballet use of the abstract diverse music choise possibilities for achitectureand design in choreography Contemporary ballet ballet technique apparent roots exploration experimentation

Muusika → Ballett
2 allalaadimist
Schools kill creativity
4
docx

Schools kill creativity

found something he/she feels passinoate about and practiced a lot. Of course there are some super kids, who haven’t practiced that much but are still very good at what they’re doing. Just not that much as much we think there are. I mean, for a kid it’s easy to look talented. Ken Robinson gave his son as an example - the part where his son plays Joseph and switches the lines with other actor on a premiere. I can give my cousin as an example. She wants me to make her a choreography every year around the Christmas. One year she forgot everything, except the beginning and the end, so she improvised everything in between. I was really proud of her, cause at first I thought she’s gonna freek out and run away. But she didn’t. Kids, they’re fierce. If they don’t remember anything, they’ll make it up. They’re more afraid to just stand and watch the silent crowd than to be wrong. Ken says that kids are not afrayd to be wrong

Keeled → Inglise keel
1 allalaadimist
FCE Result Words and Phrases
64
doc

FCE Result Words and Phrases

carry out (phr v) cartoon (n) case (n) casserole (n) cause (n) cause a stir (phr) cave (n) cell (n) cell (n) cellar (n) central to (adj) (under) certain circumstances (phr) chain (n) chain (v) chalk (n) challenge (v) change your mind (idm) 4 chapter (n) character (n) charge (v) chart (n) chat show (n) chauvinism (n unc) check-in (n) cheer up (phr v) chest (n) chest of drawers (n) chewy (adj) chilli (n) chimpanzee (n) choir (n) cholesterol (n) chord (n) choreography (n) chronologically (adv) chuck (v) chuckle (v) chunk (n) circuit board (n) circulation (n) circus (n) civilisation (n) claim (v) classical (adj) claw (n) clearing (n) click your fingers (phr) client (n) climax (n) clip (n) close-up (adj) clown (n) clue (n) cluttered (adj) code (n) coincidence (n) collapse (v) collide with (v) colonise (v) coma (n) combat (v) come forward (phr v) come up to scratch (idm) come upon (phr v) coming (adj) 5 commentator (n) commit (v)

Keeled → Inglise keel
2 allalaadimist
ESTONIAN SYMPHONIC MUSIC-THE FIRST CENTURY 1896-1996
278
doc

ESTONIAN SYMPHONIC MUSIC. THE FIRST CENTURY 1896-1996.

to move, developing in inflection and polyphony. This flow illustrates the struggle between good and evil, indicative of the dramatic essence of the plot. Due to the unfavourable wartime conditions the ballet was first performed on March 31st, 1943, at the Vanemuine Theatre with Tubin conducting. The performance was a great success. The following year Kratt was staged at the Estonia Theatre on February 24th, on the 25th anniversary of the Republic of Estonia (choreography by Rahel Olbrei, conductor Priit Veebel). We see to a great extent the primordial demonic power, this is grasping at the depth of our soul and the subconscious… in the music this ghastliness, devilry and the primeval can be heard which we, in accordance with the libretto, have a right to expect and which does not disappoint.1 The English music critic, Robert Layton remarked: “…the ideas are very fresh.

Keeled → Inglise keel
11 allalaadimist
TheCodeBreakers
946
pdf

TheCodeBreakers

arduous labor completed the solution. Some cryptologists have affected to sneer at Holmes's taking two hours to solve these cryptograms, covering "sheet after sheet of paper with figures and letters" as he did so. With so short and difficult a text, however, the time is not only understandable, but admirable/ Moreover, the dancers caper in no recognizable pattern when placed in alphabetical order, and when they pose in a graduated order of choreography, no regularity appears in the letters. In other words, the cipher of the dancing man is purely arbitrary. Some members of the Sherlock Holmes fan club, the Baker Street Irregulars, which included Alexander Woollcott, Christopher Morley, and Franklin D. Roosevelt, have kept their gaslights burning late in attempts to dis- cover a regular basis of construction. It is wasted energy. The fact that Holmes limited himself to already recovered letters in his "Come here at

Informaatika → krüptograafia
15 allalaadimist


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