Music
in sentence
6351 examples of Music in a sentence
Yeah, yo, yo, yo (Gibberish)
(Music
fades out) Thank you.
And with that, I thank you. (Applause) (Music) (Applause) (Music) (Applause) (Music) (Applause) (Music) (Applause) Is E.T. out there?
The first band on the list of bands that appears at some public
music
performance of some kind gets the sales from the first 20 tickets, then the next band gets the next 20, and so on.
We guessed that film, whose stories are a meeting place of drama, music, literature and human experience, would engage and inspire the young people participating in FILMCLUB.
(Music
ends) (Applause) So, that's what I've done with my life.
But what, you may ask, do a Polish poet, a British Dame, a country
music
hall of famer all have in common besides this totally excellent Google ranking?
Or it's used for — (Music) So this is a musical interface built by a student from Italy, and he's now turning this into a product.
Little robots are cute when they play
music
to you.
My passions are music, technology and making things.
If you watch closely — (Applause) If you watch closely, you may have seen some of the eigenmodes, but also you may have seen that jazz
music
is better with fire.
At least, it's powerful enough that if I show you these four songs, and I remind you that this is "Smells Like Teen Spirit," you can probably correctly guess, without listening to any
music
at all, that the song a die hard Nirvana fan would enjoy is this song, "I'll Stick Around" by the Foo Fighters, whose lead singer is Dave Grohl, who was the drummer in Nirvana.
"O body swayed to
music
/ O brightening glance / How [can we know] the dancer from the dance?"
CA: Thank you, thank you. (Applause) (Music) (Vocalizing) Ndicela iyeza lokuhlamba ndisuse iinkathazo.
(Music
ends) (Applause) Thandiswa Mazwai: Hello everybody.
My
music
is about memory and struggling between oppresion and freedom.
(Music
ends) (Applause) (Cheering) Thank you very much.
So depending on how I display it, I can hear and I can compose
music
with food.
The BBC beeps, they sound turquoise, and listening to Mozart became a yellow experience, so I started to paint
music
and paint people's voices, because people's voices have frequencies that I relate to color.
And here's some
music
translated into color.
Tamara, would you like to jump in? (Music) (Dinosaur roaring) (Laughter) MM: I should leap in.
Whether it's video or text or
music
or voice, it's all numbers, it's all, underlying it, mathematical functions happening, and Lovelace said, "Just because you're doing mathematical functions and symbols doesn't mean these things can't represent other things in the real world, such as music."
This was a huge leap, because Babbage is there saying, "We could compute these amazing functions and print out tables of numbers and draw graphs," — (Laughter) — and Lovelace is there and she says, "Look, this thing could even compose
music
if you told it a representation of
music
numerically."
[A laser pulse is fired] (Music) Ramesh Raskar: We're going to fire those bullets of light, and they're going to hit this wall, and because of the packet of the photons, they will scatter in all the directions, and some of them will reach our hidden mannequin, which in turn will again scatter that light, and again in turn, the door will reflect some of that scattered light.
Anyway, I was really delighted to receive the invitation to present to you some of my
music
and some of my work as a composer, presumably because it appeals to my well-known and abundant narcissism.
So, but the thing is, a dilemma quickly arose, and that is that I'm really bored with music, and I'm really bored with the role of the composer, and so I decided to put that idea, boredom, as the focus of my presentation to you today.
And I'm going to share my
music
with you, but I hope that I'm going to do so in a way that tells a story, tells a story about how I used boredom as a catalyst for creativity and invention, and how boredom actually forced me to change the fundamental question that I was asking in my discipline, and how boredom also, in a sense, pushed me towards taking on roles beyond the sort of most traditional, narrow definition of a composer.
What I'd like to do today is to start with an excerpt of a piece of
music
at the piano.
Of a piece of music, right?
But we can ask the question, "But is it music?"
And I say this rhetorically, because of course by just about any standard we would have to concede that this is, of course, a piece of music, but I put this here now because, just to set it in your brains for the moment, because we're going to return to this question.
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