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But the emotiveness creeps into his singing, and correcting that will be more difficult.
The debate that we are engaged in today must avoid the twofold temptation of emotiveness and instrumental political reaction.
The extreme emotiveness and theatricality of some of those earlier recordings was clearly misplaced.
It's always interesting to read a perspective that's not bound up in the bareknuckle emotiveness of nationalism.
"As always, Hellborg amazes with his skill and emotiveness."
Those diagnosed with a personality disorder may experience difficulties in cognition, emotiveness, interpersonal functioning or control of impulses.
He commented "I like the clarity and the emotiveness of Kavanagh.
Her mellow but insistent tone married African singing styles to the emotiveness of 1960's soul divas.
The poetry of O. Yurin is marked by emotiveness, philosophy, unusual images and rhymes.
Was it an interpretive decision by Mr. Slatkin to surrender tight ensemble to this sort of blowzy emotiveness?
This kind of emotiveness can look mannered, but for the most part Mr. Beloserkovsky stayed convincingly on the right side of the line.
(To his credit, Clausewitz had no illusions about the nature of that instrument: its violence, its unpredictability, its emotiveness.)
Many of his gazels, for instance, have a high level of emotiveness, as well as expressing a great mastery of language:
Sharing the bill is Ben Kweller, another charming young heart-barer, who tempers his emotiveness with a nice dash of goofiness.
And the emotiveness of Whitman's "Joy, Shimmate, Joy!"
Tapping into the spirit in a most physical way, through noise and raw emotiveness, Sunny Day Real Estate is moving forward rock's long history of spiritual exploration.
Yet he injected a very different style into the mix: a rather demonstrative Slavic emotiveness in which expressivity took precedence over tonal purity and rhythmic precision.
"A fanfare raising sculpture from its slumber", as Rudolph Wittkower called it, it prefigures the baroque with its restrained emotiveness.
But they attained such a grasp of structural dynamics, such a palpable sense that the first note led inexorably to the last, that they made mere emotiveness seem almost tawdry.
The heavy ornament and extravagant emotiveness of Mr. Mizrahi's singing, along with the steady glow of bowed instruments, peered out from behind almost all of Sunday's music.
Some of the aesthetic elements expressed in music include lyricism, harmony, hypnotism, emotiveness, temporal dynamics, volume dynamics, resonance, playfulness, color, subtlety, elatedness, depth, and mood (see musical development).
Daring and forward-looking this piece is not, but the six players of Concertante rush avidly into its world of gentle waltz time and hothouse emotiveness, and do well by both.
The second act scenes are staged with increasing lassitude, the cryptic dialogue drawn out with ever-lengthening pauses, the actors seemingly holding themselves back, well beneath the bar of recognizable human emotiveness.
Tempos remained slow, pedaling light, and, aside from the octave passagework, the pianist provided few of the bravura flourishes and little of the emotiveness that characterize most interpretations of the piece.
The players here gave the work an intense and compelling reading, with Mr. Peskanov, grand in his emotiveness, effectively anchored by Mr. Rosen, more meticulous and lapidarian though hardly without passion.
Emoticons are further examples of how users have adapted different expressions to suit the limitations of cyberspace communication, one of which is the "loss of emotivity".
The duo kept working with soundtrack projects and in 2003 they wrote two songs for "Emofad" (Emotivity Of Adventures), a contemporary dance performance directed and choreographed by Goran Bogdanovski.