"Fugue" Essays and Research Papers

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    Life Without Internet

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    AS-B Angelina 12054 25th‚Nov. Practice prompt 4 for 2nd Monthly Test Life without Internet The moment Selena reached down and unplugged the ether-net cable from her computer‚ she felt like school was out for the summer holiday‚ and the simultaneous relief and boredom that last bell brought. She sat quietly for a while‚ and soon realized that she had been anticipating this moment for ages‚ but for some limitations of her job‚ she had not made any plans: she was employed in a private consulting

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    Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique movement V Hector Berlioz‚ born on December 11th 1803 in Saint-André‚ France‚ was a renowned composer of romantic music. Berlioz was educated by his father who was a reputable physician. His father‚ Louis Berlioz also gave him music lessons when he was young but he was not well-trained until later in life. Berlioz was not a virtuoso‚ but he taught himself some musical techniques. Louis wanted his son to study medicine like he did. Hector Berlioz studied medicine in

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    life has to offer. “If that is possible‚” we say to ourselves‚ “then everything is possible”; a new phase in the history of human awareness has been opened‚ just as it was opened up when people first read Dante‚ or first heard Bach’s 48 preludes and fugues‚ or first learned Hamlet and King Lear." (Russell 13) This new art spoken of‚ the coined “secret revolution” that was a part of the new phase opened up‚ was modern art. This revolutionary form began shortly before 1914 (Russell 126) and is still

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    From Judaism to Defiance Although Elie is portrayed as a young devout Jew in the first chapter‚ he soon beings to question God’s authority‚ as he struggles with theodicy. After Elie’s family diverges‚ he begins to demonstrate his first signs of disbelief in God’s authority‚ especially as some of his Jewish acquaintances recite the Kaddish. While facing the crematorium pit‚ he articulates‚ “For the first time I felt revolt rise up in me. Why should I bless His name? The Eternal‚ Lord of the Universe

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    Musi1103 Final Exam Take Home Essay 16 December 2013 Cynthia Laker This essay will include an introduction‚ and then use examples of works from Mozart‚ Haydn and Beethoven to discuss the historical significance and evolution of the six genres of the Viennese Classical Style. I. The String Quartet; II. the Symphony and the Symphony Orchestra; III. Sonata; IV. The Concerto; V. Serenade This essay will also describe the four forms found in the four-movement symphony. Sonata allegro;

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    One of the most prolific and world renowned composers of his time‚ during the Baroque era‚ was Johann Sebastian Bach. The German composer has composed over 1000 known works throughout his musical career which included pieces for organ and over 300 cantatas. Most notably‚ his works for organ are among his most revered and well known. Bach was known for not just his compositional skills but his performing skills on organ‚ keyboard‚ and violin. His use of harmony and contrapuntal techniques paved the

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    Frederic Chopin

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    Still his Piano Sonatas are what he is most famous for. It seems that someone his solo pianos compositions resemble the works of John Field and Bach. One great example is Chopin’s 24 preludes in all keys obviously mirroring Bach’s 48 preludes and fugues. (Encyclopedia Britannica Online). What makes Chopin’s music so obvious to the romantic era is that they are very structured‚ yet far from being emotionless‚ he played his works with a strong rubato giving the performer another dimension of expression

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    Johann Haydn

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    Johann Michael Haydn Johann Michael Haydn was baptized on September 14‚ 1737‚ in Rohrau‚ Lower Austria‚ the exact date of his birth is unknown... Five years after his famous brother Joseph‚ their parents being a wheelwright and a cook. Michael Haydn left home around 1745 to attend the choir school at St. Stephen’s Cathedral in Vienna‚ where he received instruction in singing‚ keyboard and violin. It was at St. Stephen’s that Haydn gained a reputation for his unusually clear and beautiful voice

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    Dissociative Identity Disorder‚ which was previously known as multiple personality disorder‚ before its name was changed‚ is known to be the presence of two or more distinct identities or dissociative states. It may be within the person’s responsive awareness‚ and at least two of the persons alter states can repeatedly have control over the person’s life. The involuntary escape from reality that the person has is described by a disconnection between the persons thoughts‚ identity‚ consciousness and

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    Roxx

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    For at least two thousand years of European history until the late nineteenth century hysteria referred to a medical condition thought to be particular to women and caused by disturbances of the uterus (from the Greek ὑστέρα "hystera" = uterus)‚ such as when a neonate emerges from the female birth canal. The origin of the term hysteria is commonly attributed to Hippocrates‚ even though the term isn’t used in the writings that are collectively known as the Hippocratic corpus.[1] The Hippocratic corpus

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