Henderson as a vocalist, Mr. Alfred White and Mr. Samuel Butler as vocalists and instrumentalists, all possess artistic abilities of a fine order.
The most prominent vocalists are Madam Brown, Mr. John Mills, and Mrs. Lucy Adger; and the most prominent instrumentalists are Miss M.
Her recent tour in the western States was eminently successful, and her concerts were referred to in the papers, as being equal in interest to those given by the most celebrated vocalists of the day.
She has merit, very great merit, and with cultivation (instruction) she will rank among the very first vocalists of the age.
Its compass and elasticity are immense, and its tone will bear favourable comparison with that of most, if not all the public vocalists of the day.
In sweetness, power, compass and flexibility, it nearly equals any of the foreign vocalists who have visited our country; and it needs only the training and education theirs have received, to outstrip them all.
The principal vocalists in "Elijah" were Madame Caradori-Allan, Miss Maria B.
It would be interesting to follow up this idea and enumerate the vocalists who have broadened their musicianship through the study of other instruments than their own voices.
This is the testimony of all the great vocalists of our time--of any time.
As the vocalists showed a courageous determination to encounter fresh onslaughts, I could not protest.
This bravura air with its trumpet obbligato still remains a favourite with competentvocalists and discriminating audiences.
By studying the taste of the vocalists and so engaging their zeal, the composer found the best security for the favourable reception of his work.
The bravura of the vocalists was considered as appropriate in the churches as on the stage, only that a certain amount of moderation was becoming.
After what manner great vocalists constructed their cadenzas we are unfortunately ignorant, but instrumental cadenzas reproduced the principal subjects of the movement, just as was the case in the coda.
See Page Image] No such songs are known to belong to the years immediately following, but in 1775 we find several composed at Salzburg, probably for performance by foreign vocalists visiting the city.
The principal vocalists at the Festival were Madame Viardot Garcia, Madame Castellan, Mdlle.
The principalvocalists were Mr. Phillips and Madame Caradori; leader of the band, Mr. Mori.
The othervocalists included Miss Poole, Miss Kenneth, Herr Formes, and Master Mann.
And vocalists are as a rule better judges than are reporters and critics of what music should be.
Signor Bartolomeo Merelli had heard from the singers who had been studying Oberto respecting the uncommon quality of its music, and the opinions of the vocalists Signora Strepponi and Signor Ronconi were not to be lightly regarded.
A nice discussion as to the degree of sauciness or of bashfulness with which the vocalists who enact the Traviata should invest the consumptive lady, who coughs pianissimo and sings fortissimo in her death-scene.
The alarm of the manager and of the vocalists engaged in the Italiana was boundless.
The celebrated vocalists of the nineteenth century may be divided into three groups, very diverse from each other.
She soon became one of the most popular vocalists of her day in England, showing herself to be possessed of remarkable power, while her chief forte lay in the rendering of ballads.
A similar mishap attended the course of the 'Saengers Fluch,' under Brahms' direction, in consequence of a misunderstanding between the solo vocalists and the harpists.
As far as the vocalists were concerned, and seeing that a Schroder-Devrient was among the number, he frankly expressed his satisfaction.
All prospective vocalists should study utterance by the speaking voice first and continue it when the study of singing has been begun.
It follows that the most hopeless cases eminent teachers have to deal with are to be found among those vocalists who come to them after years of professional life before the public.
Surely, if one would learn what is Nature's teaching on this subject, he must not draw conclusions from trained vocalists alone!
These vocalists (who were small, but noisy), did a roaring trade amongst the excursionists.
This last effort was mere doggerel, but it was so insulting that I was forced to give the vocalists into custody.
Let us have the masterpieces of the heroic Teutons, by all means, but let them be sung by vocalists trained as vocalists and not merely by actors who have only taken a few steps in vocal art.
Let us return to Handel, all of whosevocalists together, admirable as they were, could not save the Royal Academy of Music from ruin.
The vocalists of a revolutionary turn of mind would have succeeded better if they had possessed more talent; but the Parisian public, even in 1793, was not prepared to accept correctness in politics as an excuse for inaccuracy in singing.
Although he had visited the north of Italy, he had no idea that it was possible to sing better than the hack-vocalists of our Opera.
Dresden, theatre of, the first opera in Europe, and the best vocalists engaged from them, i.
Jesuits' church at Paris, the great operatic vocalists engaged at the, ii.
Previously, for about three years, it had been the custom for Italian and English vocalists to sing each in their own language.
Two other vocalists are mentioned in the history of music, who not only injured themselves in singing, but actually died of their injuries.
Vocalists of Paris, their generous letter to Prince de Guéméné, ii.
The company of vocalists could easily be recruited from the numerous cathedral choirs; for the Ballet there were only the dancing-masters of the capital to select from, the profession of dancing-mistress not having yet been invented.
To-day this reproach could hardly be made, for although vocalists still receive perhaps a disproportionate share of attention, compositions, new and old, are also discussed at great length in the press.
And where the language hesitates to make this sacrifice, the vocalists come to the rescue and facilitate matters by arbitrarily changing the difficult vowel or consonant into an easy one.
Herr Alvary, the second of the vocalists who unite Italian with German merits, is a young singer who has a great future before him, if his Siegfried, a most realistic and powerful impersonation, may be argued from.
It is the scarcity of first-class actingvocalists that makes opera so expensive, and prevents it from being self-supporting.
He not only rehearses every bar of the orchestral score with minute care, but each of the vocalists has to come to his room and go through his or her part until he is satisfied.
The cure of the Madeleine officiated in person; and vocalists from the Grand Opera reinforced the choir, which chanted the high mass to the accompaniment of the organs, whence came a continuous hymn of glory.
The orchestra had played and two or three vocalists had appeared and sang, without Claudius, absorbed in this conversation, noticing that the entertainment had commenced.
The former is perhaps the softer tongue and its people the more musical, as those two delightful vocalists and envoys from thence, Jenny Lind and Christine Nilsson, would lead us to infer.
The excellent acoustic properties of the Stockholm Opera House are admitted by famous vocalists to be nearly unequalled.
Near them sat a number of young, rosy-cheeked Welsh women, staring at the vocalists with a look of wondering vacancy, that the goats on their own mountains could not have surpassed.
Have the vocalistsof these times degenerated, and the fields become aged?
The Italian operas alone were supported by the courts; the German operettas remained in the hands of private speculators; who did not possess the means of attracting vocalists of artistic cultivation.
The two other male vocalists belonged to the old Munich opera.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "vocalists" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.