Manuscript paper with variable line spacing. To suit all ages and abilities. Includes junior staves with BOLD centre line to assist younger musicians. Practice sheets for drawing treble and bass clefs. Appendix with Italian and foreign terms included. Includes Descant Recorder Fingering Chart, Guitar chords, Italian and Foreign Terms in music, Clef notation. Ideal for schools and colleges
Claire's Carolbook. 1) Created and inspired by young people - not just old reprints 2) Modern arrangements to suit the modern piano player 3) Simple progressions- most are two note chords 4) No big jumps - octave stretches a rarity! 5) No long stretches - ideal for small hands 6) Harmony is retained while maintaining simplicity 7) Rhythm is maintained 8) Two easy keys - C major and G major 9) No key signatures 10) Easy for guitar players who can recognise basic chords 11) Guide fingering without unnecessary clutter 12) Practice exercises based on carol arrangements included 13) Playable by amateurs and more advanced pianists 15) English and American versions of some popular carols. 16) Every carol has the words on the facing page in clear type. Photocopiable for use in schools, churches, hospitals and other institutions. 17) Previously unpublished carol "Guide us by a Star", guitar chords, recorder fingering, exercise pieces, board game Notopoly.
1) Created and inspired by young people - not just old reprints 2) Modern arrangements to suit the modern piano player 3) Simple progressions- most are two note chords 4) No big jumps - octave stretches a rarity! 5) No long stretches - ideal for small hands 6) Harmony is retained while maintaining simplicity 7) Rhythm is maintained 8) Two easy keys - C major and G major 9) No key signatures 10) Easy for guitar players who can recognise basic chords 11) Guide fingering without unnecessary clutter 12) Practice exercises based on carol arrangements included 13) Playable by amateurs and more advanced pianists 15) Two versions of some popular carols (English and American) 16) Every carol has the words edition on the facing page in clear type. this is photocopiable for use in schools, churches, hospitals, youth and other institutions. These Carols are arranged in two easy keys C and G major. No key signatures have been used
This 2000 book examines Tacitus' Annals as an ironic portrayal of Julio-Claudian Rome, through close analysis of passages in which characters engage in interpretation and misreading. By representing the misreading of signifying systems - such as speech, gesture, writing, social structures and natural phenomena - Tacitus obliquely comments upon the perversion of Rome's republican structure in the new principate. Furthermore, this study argues that the distinctively obscure style of the Annals is used by Tacitus to draw his reader into the ambiguities and compromises of the political regime it represents. The strain on language and meaning both portrayed and enacted by the Annals in this way gives voice to a form of political protest to which the reader must respond in the course of interpreting the narrative.
Wit has many uses in political discourse--to entertain, to underscore or unmask, to hinder or enhance insight. Wit and the Writing of History focuses on how this potential is realized in the historiography of the earlier Principate. Preeminently in Tacitus, to a lesser degree in Suetonius and Dio Cassius, wit is a vehicle for political understanding and judgment of the historical account. As part of Roman political life, hostile anecdotal or epigrammatic wit was deeply embedded in the sources used by historians and is reflected in the rhetoric of their narratives. Some anecdotes may, in fact, have been mere jests later taken as fact, hence the frequent problem of credulity. But what is historically false can be politically true. Not only were political jokes a weapon for making some fair points against the Principate; ancient rhetorical theory recognized that wit in general arises from a violation of normal, expected ways of thinking. What is "funny" is thus disturbing in a serious way as well as amusing, and in the hands of Tacitus wit becomes scalpel as well as sword.
In the 1990s, American civil society got upended and reordered as many social, cultural, political, and economic institutions were changed forever. Pretty People examines a wide range of Hollywood icons who reflect how stardom in that decade was transformed as the nation itself was signaling significant changes to familiar ideas about gender, race, ethnicity, age, class, sexuality, and nationality. Such actors as Denzel Washington, Andy Garcia, Halle Berry, Angela Bassett, Will Smith, Jennifer Lopez, and Antonio Banderas became bona fide movie stars who carried major films to amazing box-office success. Five of the decade’s top ten films were opened by three women—Julia Roberts, Jodie Foster, and Whoopi Goldberg. “Chick flick” entered the lexicon as Leonardo DiCaprio became the “King of the World,” ushering in the cult of the mega celebrity. Tom Hanks and Tom Cruise defined screen masculinity as stark contrasts between “the regular guy” and “the intense guy” while the roles of Michael Douglas exemplified the endangered “Average White Male.” A fascinating composite portrait of 1990s Hollywood and its stars, this collection marks the changes to stardom and society at century’s end.
For over a century, movies have played an important role in our lives, entertaining us, often provoking conversation and debate. Now, with the rise of digital cinema, audiences often encounter movies outside the theater and even outside the home. Traditional distribution models are challenged by new media entrepreneurs and independent film makers, usergenerated video, film blogs, mashups, downloads, and other expanding networks. Reinventing Cinema examines film culture at the turn of this century, at the precise moment when digital media are altering our historical relationship with the movies. Spanning multiple disciplines, Chuck Tryon addresses the interaction between production, distribution, and reception of films, television, and other new and emerging media.Through close readings of trade publications, DVD extras, public lectures by new media leaders, movie blogs, and YouTube videos, Tryon navigates the shift to digital cinema and examines how it is altering film and popular culture.