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But the phrase itself had no living resonance or evocativeness.
One thing that separates mere stamps from postal history is the evocativeness of an envelope or postcard.
It is questionable whether the theories can capture the evocativeness or originality of individual works of art.
Here, evocativeness, not perfection, is key.
Mr. Chaon writes with a deep, dreamy evocativeness punctuated by sharply symbolic particulars.
But for evocativeness and subtlety, the "Khovanshchina" Prelude, with its exquisite pianissimo ending, was the performance of the evening.
Early on in her education, Sullivan relates, Keller would pose questions that take the breath away in their evocativeness: "Did the sun fall?"
But despite their lack of trendiness, his scores won warm admirers, who found in them an evocativeness and a religious intensity missing in much other 20th-century music.
In the right setting, conversely, the ambivalences of the action are resolved or highlighted and the music can settle into its own form of deeply troubling evocativeness.
Segovia can be considered a catalytic figure in granting respectability to the guitar as a serious concert instrument capable of evocativeness and depth of interpretation.
But it also attests to the poetic evocativeness of the title, "From Me Flows What You Call Time."
Its sense of openness, evocativeness and romance has been a magnet for a heterogenous group of locals from Ralph Lauren to Edward Albee.
Leinster's best novel is probably The Wailing Asteroid, above-average among Leinster novels for imagination and evocativeness, with some quirky detail work that holds up fairly well.
"Quintet with Chairs and Cigarettes," to a tape by Takeko Lepre, a Japanese composer, showed Miss Way experimenting with her more typical evocativeness.
Specifically, poetic sonic effects (selected for verbal and aural felicity, not just images selected for their visual evocativeness) would also, therefore, become an influential poetic device of modernism.
Anuradha Pal composed the background score for M.F. Husain's film; Gaja Gamini; which was highly appreciated at the Cannes Film Festival for its originality & evocativeness.
Even in the film the plot feels overpacked and strained, but the fluidity of the camera work and the energy of the cross-cutting, along with the automatic evocativeness of location photography, did a lot to disguise this.
Hollybourne, a Dutch-style confection made of tabby, constructed for Charles Stewart Maurice, a Pennsylvania bridge builder, has not been restored and retains a Sleeping Beauty evocativeness that is gone from the houses you can walk through.
The plucked pleasures are multiplied in the "Concierto Madrigal" for two guitars (1968), a true compendium of Spanish dance rhythms, treated with unsurpassed mastery and evocativeness, and the lusty "Concierto Andaluz" for four guitars (1977).
"The Tender Land," his 1956 opera about a girl's coming of age on a Midwest farm, is the culmination of this style, offering both the orchestral warmth and evocativeness of "Appalachian Spring" and the homey vocal writing of "Old American Songs."
But neither dance built to the kind of emotional climax achieved by Ms. Weintraub and by Heather Harrington in her "Locked Doors," a portrait of a remembered lost child, set to a score by Cam Millar whose haunting evocativeness slightly overwhelmed the choreography.