Music
in sentence
6351 examples of Music in a sentence
We call this "the
music
of the universe."
I'd like you to listen to the first two notes of that
music.
We love this
music
so much we actually dance to it.
(Chirping sound) (Chirping sound) It's the
music
of the universe!
I mean, just to give you some idea: when I was five or six years old and obsessed with "The Sound of Music," and running around, singing, "I am 16 going on 17," all day every day, my mother sat me down for a very serious conversation and she said, "OK, look.
I'm a sign-language interpreter that specializes in
music
interpreting.
And you're probably wondering why Deaf people would attend concerts, but actually,
music
is so much more than sound simply traveling through the ear.
See, Deaf people experience music, just in a different way.
For example, my friend Lisa, she cuts her hair a certain length, so she feels the vibrations of sound in the
music.
And
music
has psychological effects on us.
So, myself, I am a sign-language interpreter, so what I have to do is I have to take
music
and bring it to life.
In doing that, I become a bridge between the hearing world and the Deaf world, making sure that I'm representing
music
and the artistry of what
music
represents.
Looking down in the audience and seeing Deaf and hard-of-hearing members, all of those people dancing and jamming out and feeling included in that
music
experience.
And
music
shouldn't be one of them.
(Applause and cheers) (Music: "Top Knot Turn Up") (Percussion) Madame Gandhi: This is a song about getting the work done.
(Music
and applause) Madame Gandhi.
(Applause and cheers)
(Music
ends) (Applause and cheers) Amber, it's such a pleasure to share this stage with you, and to make my
music
accessible to an audience who might be hard of hearing or Deaf and otherwise might not be able to be included in my
music.
And it really wasn't until this collaboration that I had thought of the fact that though I work so much in diversity and inclusion, that my
music
may not be reaching as many people as it could be.
Music
was my perspective into somebody else's point of view, into storytelling, into understanding how the world works.
And I did my MBA at Harvard, all with the intention of being able to make a difference in the
music
industry and move the needle on gender equality from the business side.
But it was only until three years ago, when I ran the London Marathon bleeding freely on my cycle to combat the global menstrual stigma that women face every day all around the world, that I realized that I have a message, and that the most effective way that I can convey my message was through my
music.
And why
music?
Because
music
caters to the emotions.
Music
is joyful.
Music
pulls you in with the beat and the rhythm and the melodies.
The
music
pulls you in via the community aspect of it.
And
music
allows you to access somebody else's truth.
In the
music
I listen to today, sometimes I'm like, wow, I love the rhythm so much, but the message is so misogynist, it's tough to work out to our run to or do whatever it is that I'm trying to do.
(Music
ends) (Applause and cheers) Thank you.
With friends, we had been sitting and watching match football, and having some good
music
with WorldSpace radio, when it started, I think.
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