Although her repertoire includes piano works spanning the last 250 years, Ruth has concentrated largely on Rachmaninoff and Scriabin, a Russian composer of the same era.
Of course Bobby Short will be on stage too; he'll do at least five songs out of his repertoire of 1,000-plus.
He still has one of the clearest, strongest, sweetest tenor voices in the business, and his repertoire is enormous.
Mr. Bispham has a repertoireof nearly fifty roles, and can sing entire parts in German, Italian, French, and English.
Her repertoire included about thirty operas, mostly of the Italian school, though she also sang in the operas of Meyerbeer and Gounod, and others.
Her versatility was very great, and she had a repertoire of fifty-six roles.
His repertoire was remarkable, consisting of over eighty operas.
His voice was a rich, powerful bass of more than two octaves, from E below the line to F, and he had a repertoire of over sixty operas.
He has a large repertoire of baritone operatic parts, in which he has sung with great success, and he is one of the best oratorio and concert baritones of the day.
For a comprehensive bibliography, including monographs and published documents, see Ulysse Chevalier, Repertoire des sources hist.
They seem to have a bigger repertoireof personnel needing jobs.
One of them in particular was rather fluent, and we were often entertained from his endless repertoire of stories.
He was in the sameRepertoire Company with me," replied the ex-actor.
At first the repertoire contained little variety, though the pieces were generally well selected.
It cost me some trouble to make him understand why I preferred a few exceptionally fine performances of my works in Karlsruhe to the mere chance of having them inscribed on the repertoire of the Vienna Opera House.
He boasted that he had again introduced my operas, which had been repeatedly forbidden, into the repertoire of the Dresden theatre, and had also taken part in them himself with great success.
Tedesco, a tragedienne, who, on account of her beauty, would be a very valuable addition to the repertoire of his theatre, protesting that he could think of no woman better fitted for the part of Venus.
She has a powerful and brilliant tone, with sweet tenderness and sympathy, which appeal to the soul of the listener, and she confines her repertoire to the highest class of musical compositions.
When Ysaye came to America in 1894 he was prepared with a repertoire consisting of ninety-one pieces.
His repertoirewas composed of hymns and songs of a rather solemn cast.
This is one of the most difficult feats in the repertoire of the muscle-reader, and was excelled in by Bishop and Stuart Cumberland.
The materialization of a spirit hand which crept from beneath a table-cover, and showed itself to the "believers," was one of the most startling things in the repertoire of D.
A rehearsal of Carmen was to be called that afternoon at three, and a repertoire was arranged.
Use two-inch streamers clear across the pages, then you can get some fresh stuff and the repertoire to-night for the morning papers.
After a while I enlarged the repertoire by introducing several of Edward MacDowell's smaller works.
But these are literary curiosities and mean something very different from the retention of a play on the repertoire of the professional public theatres.
The only titles on this list that secured a permanent foothold on the repertoire of the playhouses were Bulwer’s two pieces, which were precisely the most flimsy of the whole lot, from the literary point of view.
It still is pianistic; more pianistic and more suitable to the modern repertoire than a good deal of music by greater men who lived considerably later.
Seated on a conspicuous perch, as if inviting attention to his performance, with uplifted head and drooping tail he repeats the one exultant, dashing air to which his repertoire is limited, without waiting for an encore.
Almost the entire repertoire of classical chamber music seems to have been gone through during this and succeeding seasons; all the duet sonatas and pianoforte trios and quartets, etc.
It may still be hoped, however, that the serenade may be revived, and may take its place in the repertoire of our concert societies.
The members of the choral society were delighted to welcome their conductor, who, in the course of the season, added to their repertoire by arranging two folk-songs for use at the practices.
My repertoire was extensive in my contract, but limited on the actual billboards, owing to a predominance of prima donnas.
She says that the familiar airs of the barrel organs, which were played in the street every day, were all added to my repertoire in due time, correct as to melody, although I was too young to enunciate properly.
I was about to make a new contract with the Metropolitan under a different management, new artists were engaged who might reasonably be supposed to share some of the repertoire which I had not yet sung.
It was Clara Lane whom I first heard sing "Carmen," a role which has recently figured so successfully in my own repertoireat the Metropolitan in New York.
This operatic fairy-tale held an enviable place in the regular repertoire for three years, and was one of my happiest successes.
During the winter Gailhard had negotiated and secured my services for a special spring season, so that after the Metropolitan season I was to realize another cherished ambition and appear in the regular repertoire of the Paris Opera.
Meantime, the electric pianoforte played steadily through a repertoire that had progressed from the Largo to more vivacious pieces of the American folkdance school.
Indeed his entire repertoire of ballads was confined to the saddest themes, chiefly of desirable maidens taken off untimely either by disease or accident.