释义 |
Definition of fugal in English: fugaladjective ˈfjuːɡ(ə)lˈfjuɡəl Of the nature of a fugue. 赋格式的;赋格曲的 the virtuosity of the fugal finale 赋格式终曲的精湛技巧。 Example sentencesExamples - The sixteenth variation - a famous tour-de-force - is a ‘French overture’ - that is, a grand introduction of slow dotted rhythms, followed by a fugal allegro.
- He excelled the skills even of Frescobaldi in the manipulation of fugal devices such as countersubject, stretto and sustained pedalpoint.
- At the premiere Handel gave an organ extemporisation on the fugal subject taken up by the choir.
- And Handel was no less rigorous and independent in his exploitation of fugal material by inferior composers.
- There follows a chapter on the three fugal finales from op.20, its start a high point of felicitous writing.
- Only during the fugal finale do the singing, acting, and stage conception come together to move the listener and to convince him how great this opera really is.
- Zelenka's music is always very pleasant and one must take particular notice of his exquisite ‘Salve Regina’, a truly exquisite work that is brimful and replete with melodies and fugal counterpoint.
- At the announcement of fugal subject, the choirs join.
- In vivid inventiveness and rhetorical originality he outstrips his master Le Sueur, while showing a firm grasp of contrapuntal and fugal techniques not at all evident in his examination results at the time.
- There are seven movements, the first six slow, sparely scored, and pregnant with anticipation before the finale explodes into a furious fugal dash to the abyss.
- Haydn composed many symphonies, divertimentos, and chamber pieces for secular entertainments; several of the late symphonies from the 1780s are in three movements without minuet and some contain fugal finales.
- The Bristol instrument and indeed Adrian Partington are at their most convincing when there is a constant flow of music, as in the fugal development to the sonata's finale.
- Kletzki's symphony is an unsettling work, written in German fugal modes and sonata form that stretch back to Bach and Haydn yet rippling with refugee jitters, the rhythms of dispossession.
- Its fugal partner is heroic music in the form of a French Overture; Parmentier plays it quite slowly which allows all the delicious detail to come forth.
- If she conceives of it as a fugue, she uses techniques of counterpoint and fugal structure to make the piece.
- The fugal finale was full of clarity of motivic detail, every part in place, building thrilling momentum.
- There was a fine performance by the boys' choir, Boni Pueri, whose five part final chorus is characterised by richly scored orchestral music combined with traditional fugal writing.
- It consists of a complete four-minute piece, in the form of a simple prelude or voluntary and the start - just a few bars - of a fugal Allegro in the manner of a toccata.
- The cadenza's fugal opening was arresting, followed by Beethovenian drama and power.
- The work mixes long, singing lines with fugal and canonic sections.
Derivativesadverb God's great glory is praised fugally by the chorus in the key of E minor established by the previous movement. Example sentencesExamples - This movement ends fugally with ‘Cum sancto spiritu in Gloria Dei patris, amen.’
- In this cantata, however, Bach treats each phrase of the chorale fugally throughout the first movement.
- His Bach is clear, even when texture gets fugally complex.
- It opens with an impressive Allegro that begins fugally and later develops a tightly knit symphonic argument.
Definition of fugal in US English: fugaladjectiveˈfjuɡəlˈfyo͞oɡəl Of the nature of a fugue. 赋格式的;赋格曲的 the virtuosity of the fugal finale 赋格式终曲的精湛技巧。 Example sentencesExamples - The fugal finale was full of clarity of motivic detail, every part in place, building thrilling momentum.
- There are seven movements, the first six slow, sparely scored, and pregnant with anticipation before the finale explodes into a furious fugal dash to the abyss.
- And Handel was no less rigorous and independent in his exploitation of fugal material by inferior composers.
- Its fugal partner is heroic music in the form of a French Overture; Parmentier plays it quite slowly which allows all the delicious detail to come forth.
- The work mixes long, singing lines with fugal and canonic sections.
- It consists of a complete four-minute piece, in the form of a simple prelude or voluntary and the start - just a few bars - of a fugal Allegro in the manner of a toccata.
- The Bristol instrument and indeed Adrian Partington are at their most convincing when there is a constant flow of music, as in the fugal development to the sonata's finale.
- Zelenka's music is always very pleasant and one must take particular notice of his exquisite ‘Salve Regina’, a truly exquisite work that is brimful and replete with melodies and fugal counterpoint.
- Haydn composed many symphonies, divertimentos, and chamber pieces for secular entertainments; several of the late symphonies from the 1780s are in three movements without minuet and some contain fugal finales.
- If she conceives of it as a fugue, she uses techniques of counterpoint and fugal structure to make the piece.
- Only during the fugal finale do the singing, acting, and stage conception come together to move the listener and to convince him how great this opera really is.
- At the premiere Handel gave an organ extemporisation on the fugal subject taken up by the choir.
- There was a fine performance by the boys' choir, Boni Pueri, whose five part final chorus is characterised by richly scored orchestral music combined with traditional fugal writing.
- He excelled the skills even of Frescobaldi in the manipulation of fugal devices such as countersubject, stretto and sustained pedalpoint.
- In vivid inventiveness and rhetorical originality he outstrips his master Le Sueur, while showing a firm grasp of contrapuntal and fugal techniques not at all evident in his examination results at the time.
- There follows a chapter on the three fugal finales from op.20, its start a high point of felicitous writing.
- At the announcement of fugal subject, the choirs join.
- The sixteenth variation - a famous tour-de-force - is a ‘French overture’ - that is, a grand introduction of slow dotted rhythms, followed by a fugal allegro.
- Kletzki's symphony is an unsettling work, written in German fugal modes and sonata form that stretch back to Bach and Haydn yet rippling with refugee jitters, the rhythms of dispossession.
- The cadenza's fugal opening was arresting, followed by Beethovenian drama and power.
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