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115 Sentences With "most resonant"

How to use most resonant in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "most resonant" and check conjugation/comparative form for "most resonant". Mastering all the usages of "most resonant" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Moreover, this is today his most resonant contribution to American history.
Republican officials tell us that's their most resonant message against her.
VICE: What about Uglies do you think is the most resonant today?
That ultimately may be the most resonant aspect of this shallow biopic.
I think that to me was the most resonant part of this.
The most resonant and wrenching object here is a bill of sale.
But the most resonant performance of the evening came when Staff Sgt.
Still, the most resonant moments are the poppiest tracks, dredged from Hval's messy world.
In our more enlightened but increasingly regressive age, these scenes feel the most resonant.
During their glory years, some of the Raiders' most resonant blows were even legal.
Over the past couple of years, though, fitness emerged as the most resonant feature of the Watch.
The photographs in "Séance" are often most resonant when they slip furthest from photography's ties to proof.
That even though 9/11 is the most resonant moment in American history, it was a fluke?
Astor's sister, Madeline (Anna Jacoby-Heron), has little screen time but imparts the film's most resonant wisdom.
The first few hours of "When We Rise" — before the shift to "adult" actors — are the most resonant.
Meanwhile, climate change is one of the most resonant issues in the liberal-leaning, Trump-doubting Bay Area.
His most resonant reason, however, was that Google employees could no longer be trusted to keep matters confidential.
The most resonant lines and scenes in Brokeback traded on the supposed dissonance between stoic masculinity and deep emotion.
There are many reasons that people don't like smartwatches, but perhaps the most resonant is their terrible battery life.
The most resonant episode from Watergate may be the Saturday Night Massacre, carried out by Nixon in October, 1973.
The most resonant parts of the EP come from the offerings that didn't eventually end up on No. 1.
But the surreal image — which, at its most resonant, breaks through consciousness instantaneously and surprisingly — is an elusive thing.
With 1956's "Giovanni's Room," James Baldwin wrote one of modern literature's most resonant — and complicated — gay love stories.
The most resonant part of the book, however, comes near the beginning, when King discusses three different categories of scare.
Visitors sift through a variety of experiences, letting the most resonant imagery stick in the mind on its own accord.
Her new song "Lullaby," which Noisey is premiering above, covers comparable ground but it might be her most resonant yet.
Maybe the stories we tell about our culture's most resonant figures should strive to be true, for better or worse.
The book's most resonant chords hover at a frequency detected in the balance of Avedon's austere minimalism and Baldwin's mournful jeremiad.
But the most resonant moment on the LP comes with "Here Comes The Snow," a song that discusses winter-induced melancholia.
In the episode's most resonant scene, Carl takes it upon himself to barter peace and offers himself as a sacrificial lamb.
That's probably the most resonant message beamed back from the futures of 2017—it's all contingent on that transfer of generational power.
Within the conventions of the Western — and, sometimes, by subverting them — they've been able to tell some of their most resonant tales.
This may also be why, lately, TV's most resonant commentaries on the present have been focused on single stories from the past.
He says he designed around 100 potential characters for the game, but found that the mother and daughter pair were the most resonant.
"Better Things" really doesn't need to stack the deck this way; it's most resonant when it treats its heroine as a moral mixture.
The race at the beginning — the leading candidates and the most resonant issue — is often unrecognizably different from the race at the end.
The most resonant critique of Bloomberg, de Blasio's central critique, is that he governed for the 1 percent rather than the 99 percent.
And with this overwhelming amount of choice, consumers now gravitate not only toward the most resonant content, but also the most engaging experiences.
Its new website will put political topics up for a vote — and the most resonant ideas will form the basis of the organization's orthodoxy.
He fully breaks down in the episode's most resonant scene, terrified by the prospect of acting without the full assurance of his own rightness.
Notable Bachelor live-tweeter Michelle Collins and blogger Dana Weiss' tweets were perhaps a bit of a stretch — or perhaps the most resonant of all.
Perhaps the most resonant stories are those about marriage; Motoya (a playwright as well as an author) excels in putting husband and wife through unusual trials.
Just the ability to tease out of thin air the most important ideas, the most resonant ideas in any setting is something that you hone in improv.
So instead, The Hamilton Mixtape remixes them, turning each song's most resonant line into a recurring sample and then veering away from history, into the present day.
Perhaps the most resonant moment comes during the quieter side of Lea's music in "yanking the peals off around my neck..," which showcases her plaintive folk side.
And the convergence of downtempo hip-hop and slinky electronica, led by Wedidit, Brainfeeder and Timetable Records, is among the city's most resonant musical exports of late.
Still, while Washington proved Penn State's most immediate competitor for the final playoff spot, the Nittany Lions' most resonant comparison is with their conference mate Ohio State.
But the bill eliminates big cuts in payroll taxes and investment taxes for the wealthy, blunting one of the most resonant Democratic lines of attack against the effort.
After a day of boos, protests, and raucousness on day one of the Democratic National Convention, Michelle Obama gave arguably the best, most resonant speech of the day.
Indeed, one of the most resonant lines in the script is drawn almost verbatim from an actual Noonan quote: "There's no machine," she once said, mentioning O'Connell and Corning.
Photo by Kentaro Takahashi A Dead Forest Index is an experimental indie band from London by way of New Zealand, that makes the most resonant sound out of the most minimal instrumentation.
Ms. Roddy's smoky-voiced authority recalls a young Kathleen Turner, and the scenes between Nora and her husband and a Citizen Army rebel combatant, Jack (Fionn Walton), are among the most resonant.
But the most resonant lesson from that draft a decade ago is that were it held today, Portland would not need the benefit of hindsight to know to pick Durant over Oden.
Title notwithstanding, and no matter Amalric's raffish magic, the most resonant — and haunting — scenes in the film are those shared by the two women, every word and glance between them truly combustible.
At a time when the New York fashion scene lacks direction, Mr. Simons's appointment at the top level of one of America's most resonant brands is a potential game-changer for the industry.
Yet visitors might easily miss one of the most resonant examples of architecture: Vicenza in miniature, circa 1577, the year the town council commissioned Palladio to design a small model of the city.
It is when McBride — having lived her entire adult life in public as a trans advocate and budding political figure — is finally able to shed her public persona that her narrative is most resonant.
Castile's death was one of the most resonant of America's many officer-involved shootings this past year, in no small part because Reynolds filmed the aftermath from inside the car and livestreamed it on Facebook.
Sufism has shaped literature and art for centuries, and is associated with many of the most resonant pieces of Islam's "golden age," lasting from roughly the eighth through 13th centuries, including the poetry of Rumi.
For American and European audiences, Sidibé's most resonant work revolved around the senses of celebration: attending the parties around and after Mali's independence in 1960, tunes pulsing, revelers in sharp dress and the good times coming.
The rent regulation package, which is expected to be approved before the end of the week, is perhaps the most resonant symbol of the change in power in Albany since Democrats took complete control in November.
The most resonant chosen one narratives in recent years, then, have tended to be those that play up a chosen hero who is accidentally chosen, or becomes a hero through their own moral grit and determination.
But like Hill's case, Schilling's speech was of a political nature, on one of the most resonant issues of the day, and the speech was made on his personal Facebook account in his capacity as a private citizen.
With the growing popularity of so-called "walking simulators" after Dear Esther left many game critics confused back in 2012, and Proteus achieved some success a year later, the most resonant critique is that these interactive experiences aren't games.
May's most resonant speeches, casting her in the mold of the Iron Lady, Margaret Thatcher, who famously "handbagged" opponents by digging out briefing papers from her purse, a gesture that typically signaled the approach of a political knockout blow.
The first narrative, and it tells one of the simplest and most resonant stories we have: a tale of the hunter and the hunted, of small and easily mocked pursuers trying to bring down a scary but vulnerable beast.
And that becomes the takeaway of these movies, which are not the first, freshest, or most resonant ones to delve into drug addiction or the suffering caused by bigotry, but are sideways takes on the idea of the idealized son.
Arguably, the generation for whom the store was most resonant — those who came of age in the "Sex and the City" era, when Barneys was shorthand for New York's most impenetrably chic inner circle — are already past target-consumer age.
One of the most resonant and powerful essays in "Being There" is "The White Savior Industrial Complex," an expansion of Cole's seven-part-Twitter-feed response to "Kony 2012," a video calling for the arrest of the Ugandan rebel leader Joseph Kony.
The Palestinian cause, once among the most resonant in the Arab world, has dropped down the priority list as chaos has engulfed Syria, Iraq, Yemen and Libya, and as the gulf states are consumed with low oil prices and their rivalry with Iran.
But his most resonant moment came when he emphasized his emotional connection with an evangelical movement that was initially skeptical of him — skepticism that also took root at Liberty, where students in October protested the younger Mr. Falwell's support for Mr. Trump.
Mr. Trump's visit to Wisconsin was the latest stop on his "thank-you" tour of battleground states, and one of the most resonant, given that his slim victory in this previously reliable Democratic bastion was so unexpected, and for Hillary Clinton, so devastating.
The list of actions contemplated — with some already executed — is long, but the planned dissolution of the Donald J. Trump Foundation might be the most resonant, given the enormous controversies surrounding the nonprofit, which is under investigation by the New York attorney general.
Obama wore was never simply that it was good to mix up your wardrobe among a group of designers, but rather that clothes were most resonant when they were an expression of commitment to an idea, or an ideal, that had resonance.
Valenzuela's photograph pushes into the audience's space by provoking a disoriented reaction that matches his subject — an experience that characterizes the most resonant works in NW Art Now, the regional group show at the Tacoma Art Museum (TAM) where "Goal Keeper #1" hangs.
As the crowd threw its fists in the air, as the band continued pummeling away at one of the most resonant emotional campaigns in American rock music, as our horizons expanded, I was happy to be recruited — to believe, finally, in the audacity of doom.
Chesa Boudin, a public defender whose parents went to prison for their role in an armed heist, came out ahead in the race for San Francisco district attorney — the biggest and most resonant win for criminal justice reformers since the 2017 election of Philadelphia's Larry Krasner.
In short, the Coens work in mysterious ways in this odd piece, one that offers just intermittent pleasures and may be most fruitfully considered alongside one of the brothers' most resonant creations, A Serious Man; this is a portrait of a righteous man in a morals-free zone.
Brexiteers know that voters will take his arguments seriously: the most resonant yet of the line-up of credible, authoritative voices—the Bank of England, the IMF, business leaders, former prime ministers—whose warnings form a steady drum-beat that should stay Brexit-inclined voters' hands on referendum day.
Adlon initially considered tweaking the central character to distinguish between Sam's life and her own—"to make her a manicurist, or have a gay brother living in the back yard, or something," she said—but eventually she decided that the details of her own life felt the most resonant.
Bibó's suggestion in The Jewish Question in Hungary After 1944 (1948) that "everyone must draw up a list of things he was solely or partly responsible for" points to the theme of personal responsibility in the face of oppressive forces that, for me, was the most resonant one in the exhibition.
It is staging a highly anticipated N.B.A. finals, so far the most watched since Michael Jordan's last, in 1998, with several of the most resonant players in the world; recently began a nine-year, $24 billion broadcast television deal; and experienced its highest attendance ever for the third consecutive year.
Ms. Pite's contribution is by far the most resonant, a prescient reflection of our political moment that shifts from satirical to more gravely chilling, as four dancers — Jon Bond, Imre Van Opstal, Rena Narumi and Fernando Hernando Magadan — hammer out a mysterious deal (or fail to) around a sleek conference table.
The outline is there: Neruda went on the run when the Communist Party was banned, eventually escaping through mountains into Argentina; and he passed the time in part reading detective novels, charming everyone he met and producing some of the most resonant poems of his life, poems blending emotion with politics and ideology.
A latter-day parse leaves the sentence looking slightly off—surely, to preserve the ascent in importance, "Democrat" should precede "American"—but it lives in my memory as the single most resonant piece of Kennedy oratory, beyond the syllogism of the missile-crisis speech or the empathetic exercise proposed in the civil-rights address.
Some of the most resonant scenes in Moonlight that explore vulnerability and intimacy occur between Chiron and his older male mentor, Juan (Mahershala Ali), who acts as a father figure, in a revalorization of black fatherhood and masculinity — for instance, the moment when Juan gently holds Chiron in the ocean to teach him to swim, and to trust.
But the theme that proved most resonant in the minds of my 20 or so freshmen was the one that I suspect was also closest to the hearts of the show's writers, judging by how pervasively they wrote and revised it over the course of three seasons: sexual violence and the way that institutions try their damndest to hide, diminish, or mischaracterize it as something other than what it is.
MOST RESONANT POLITICAL COMEDY It's a safe bet that next year will bring a ton of comedy about the #MeToo moment, but even before The New York Times published its exposés of Harvey Weinstein and Louis C.K., Tig Notaro took on Louis C.K., her own producer, with a subplot in her amusing mosey of a series, "One Mississippi," that had obvious echoes of the sexual misconduct allegations leveled against him.
When my first novel, "The People in the Trees," came out in 2013, I bought just one thing with my advance: a deep-blue enamel ring that I had lettered with the first line — Kaulana na pua a o Hawaii/Famous are the flowers of Hawaii — of one of the most resonant Hawaiian protest songs, "Famous Are the Flowers," written in 1893 to voice support for the overthrown Queen Liliuokalani, the islands' last monarch.
Also referred to as just gong, gong gedé is the deepest, and most resonant. Gede, sometimes written gde, means 'big' in Balinese. Because it is the largest of the gongs, it is considered to be the most sacred instrument in kebyar. It is never dampened, always allowed to decay.
However, he still found that "be it because their sound is not right for covering such an act or because they let their imagination run a little too wild for the sake of the art of reinterpretation, the creativity is vulnerable to quickly becoming a gimmick." He listed "Oh Father" and "Like a Prayer" as two highlights, describing them as the "most resonant".
The unique material, as well as different versions of the works by Evgenia Maltceva exhibited at the Vinzavod Center for Contemporary Art in September 2012, published for the very first time, makes this book a valuable historical record of one of the most resonant art exhibitions that took place in Moscow in the past few years. The book was designed by Galina Bleikh.
"Philip Levine's Poetry is Full of People, A Rarity." (August 10, 2011). New York Times article. David Baker, writing about What Work Is (1991) in the Kenyon Review, said Levine has “one of our most resonant voices of social conviction and witness, and he speaks with a powerful clarity…What Work Is may be one of the most important books of poetry of our time.
A floor tom is a double-skin drum, most often but not always as deep as its diameter, traditionally mounted on three legs and to the drummer's right for a right- handed drummer. It is normally the deepest-toned drum played by sticks in the kit, above the bass drum but below all others, and the most resonant, more so than even the bass drum.
The other "side" > of the slender, hourglass-shaped pitcher depicts a big green cucumber being > peeled by a pair of hands. At the pitcher's thin "waist," the cucumber > nearly disappears. Its extreme attentuation mirrors what actually happens to > cucumbers when they're peeled too vigorously. To walk around the piece is to > follow a brief recto-verso drama whose most resonant metaphors hit viewers > of both sexes below the belt.
Everett remarks on the close similarity between "Long, Long, Long" and "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands", as well as an understated musical mood akin to the Band's early work. The song's ending, which would come about through happenstance while the Beatles were working in the recording studio, is marked by Harrison playing a final, G minor 7 chord, which author Ian MacDonald considers "one of the most resonant [chords] in The Beatles' discography".
Haynes was famous for having one of the loudest and most resonant voices in the House of Commons. He was sponsored by the National Union of Mineworkers, and during the 1984-85 strike remained loyal to the union rather than support the majority of Nottinghamshire miners who broke away to form the Union of Democratic Mineworkers. He frequently highlighted the problems of the very poorest in society when putting questions to Margaret Thatcher and her ministers. Haynes died in Westwood, Nottinghamshire, in September 1998 at the age of 72.
Pileated Woodpecker, Canadian Biodiversity Web Site When clashing with conspecifics, they engage in much chasing, calling, striking with the wings, and jabbing with the bill. Drumming is most commonly to proclaim a territory, and hollow trees are often used to make the most resonant sound possible. The display drum consists of a burst of 11 to 30 taps delivered in less than a second. Pileated woodpeckers have been observed to move to another site if any eggs have fallen out of the nest—a rare habit in birds.
Cemetery historian Ken Worpole argues that the Cross of Sacrifice "became one of the most resonant and distinctive artefacts in British and Commonwealth war cemeteries, following the end of World War One." First World War historian Bruce Scates observes that its symbolism was effective throughout the Commonwealth, despite widely disparate cultural and religious norms. Historians agree it is the most widely imitated of Commonwealth war memorials, and Sheftall concludes that it has become the archetypal example of Great War commemoration in Britain. Artistically, the Cross of Sacrifice has been called "[t]raditional but austere, even stark".
Rotten Tomatoes gives the film an approval rating of 91%, with an average rating of 8.1/10, based on 228 reviews. The website's critical consensus states, "Woody Allen's Blue Jasmine finds the director in peak late- period form—and benefiting from a superb cast led by Cate Blanchett." On Metacritic, the film received a score of 78/100 based on 47 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Early reviews suggested the film would be rated very highly among Allen's recent offerings, and praised Blanchett's performance as one of her strongest, if not the best of her career: David Denby of The New Yorker stated that "in all, this is the strongest, most resonant movie Woody Allen has made in years".
On 1 July 2020, the day after implementation of the security law, tens of thousands of Hong Kong people gathered on the streets in Causeway Bay to march. On 2 July, the Hong Kong government declared the 'Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our time' slogan depicted on a banner here – "the most resonant slogan of its protest movement" – to be subversive and in violation of the law. More countries and groups responded after the law was enacted on 30 June 2020. The UK, the President of the European Council, and NATO responded with statements that China was destroying the rule of law in Hong Kong, and the UK, Taiwan and Canada warned their citizens against visiting Hong Kong.
The wooden statue worshipped in the shrine goes back to the 12th century and is known as Madonna della Ceriola presumably because it was engraved in a block of Austrian oak wood (in Italian cerro). It represents the Holy Virgin on a throne taking baby Jesus with her arms. Inside the church, with some frescoes and paintings and two fine saints' statues flanking the Virgin, there are many ex-voto tablets celebrating numerous miracles attributed the Madonna. One of the most resonant among them was the protection granted to the islanders against a cholera outbreak of 1816: in sign of gratitude every second Sunday of July is still celebrated a feast called Madonna del Cholera (Madonna of the Cholera).
The inside of a cavity from a Russian military radar transmitter, with the cover removed. The cavity serves as the resonant circuit of an oscillator using the triode vacuum tube inside. Parts: (1) A setscrew trimmer capacitor used to adjust the frequency (2) The top of the GS13-1 triode which generates the microwaves (3) A wire coupling loop from which the output power is taken Most resonant cavities are made from closed (or short-circuited) sections of waveguide or high-permittivity dielectric material (see dielectric resonator). Electric and magnetic energy is stored in the cavity and the only losses are due to finite conductivity of cavity walls and dielectric losses of material filling the cavity.
The strength of these paramilitary formations were 20,000 men enrolled, among them war veterans, who were neutral or strongly anti-fascist. Perhaps the most resonant event was the defense of Parma against fascist squadrismo in 1922: around 10,000 squadristi, first under the command of Roberto Farinacci, then Italo Balbo, had to withdraw from the city after five days of clashes against a group consisting of socialists, anarchists and communists, controlled by the heads of the Arditi del Popolo (350 took part in the battle against the fascists) Antonio Cieri and Guido Picelli. The Fascist lost 39 men, the Arditi del Popolo five. In the following months, many heads of the Arditi del Popolo were jailed or killed by fascist squadristi, sometimes with the collusion of police agencies.
This not only saved space but brought the powerful bass strings directly over the most resonant part of the sound-board, a principle used to this day in the construction of all pianos, both grands and uprights. Chickering was the largest piano manufacturer in the United States in the middle of the 19th century, but was surpassed in the 1860s by Steinway. In 1867, Jonas's son Frank Chickering had the Imperial Cross of the Legion of Honour, then one of the world's most prestigious non- military awards, bestowed upon him by Emperor Napoleon III for services to the art of music, one of more than 200 awards the piano manufacturer garnered over the years. The company became in 1908 part of the American Piano Company (Ampico),Grove's dictionary of music and musicians.
"If you are among those behatted hordes and live in Texas, chances are yours is a Resistol," wrote Peter Applebome in Texas Monthly.Texas Monthly: Read Me. Texas "Based in Garland, Resistol sells about a million cowboy hats a year, ranging in price from $15 for a straw workingman's special to $3000 for a beaver-and-ermine number. The cowboy hat may be the single most resonant throwback to the glory days of the open range, the one thing that most says "Texas" to the rest of the world." Among the celebrities who have worn a Resistol are actors John Wayne and Henry Fonda; Country Singer George Strait; United States Presidents Lyndon Baines Johnson and Ronald Reagan;Threads: Ronald Regan fulfills the Republican dream of cowboy politics: Threads: mensvogue.
Catcall (aka Catherine Kelleher) is a Sydney musician and singer. A former member of punk band Kiosk, Catcall released her debut solo album, The Warmest Place, in May 2012 through Ivy League Records. Gawker described Satellites as “sublimely catchy”, and influential US music blog Gorilla vs Bear placed the track in its top 100 songs of 2011. The yearning and soulful Swimming Pool topped Hype Machine upon release, received high praise from sites like Rose Quartz, Fader and Electrorash, and was voted the best local track of 2010 by Mess+Noise who described it as “…the most resonant pop song to unexpectedly emerge in 2010… This is a rare species of pop music that doesn’t press itself upon you. It bleeds and smears and evolves and gradually becomes alive”.
Trump's "Make America Great Again!" sign used during his 2016 presidential campaign before Trump selected Mike Pence as his vice presidential running mate "Make America Great Again" (MAGA; ) is a campaign slogan which is used in American politics and was popularized by Donald Trump in his successful 2016 presidential campaign. Ronald Reagan used the similar slogan "Let's make America great again" in his successful 1980 presidential campaign. Bill Clinton also used the phrase in speeches during his successful 1992 presidential campaign and used it again in a radio commercial aired for his wife Hillary's 2008 presidential primary campaign. Democratic pollster Douglas Schoen has called Trump's use of the phrase "probably the most resonant campaign slogan in recent history", citing large majorities of Americans who believed that the country was in decline.
Much of the responsibility for the fashion for high-quality Celtic Revival jewellery belongs to George Waterhouse, a jeweller from Sheffield, England, who moved to Dublin in 1842. Before the end of the decade, he and the long-established Dublin firm West & Son of College Green (later moving to Grafton Street) were finding it necessary to register their designs to prevent copying. Of the various types of objects made, the brooches were both the "most resonant" and those which could be sold with the least alteration to the original form and design, although the jewellers generally reduced their size and fitted them with conventional pins and catches behind, even though the Kashmir shawls that were also fashionable at the time were often loosely woven and not unsuitable for fastening in the original way.Gere and Rudoe, 444.
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 74% based on 23 reviews, and an average rating of 6.5/10. On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 61 out of 100, based on 6 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". In a feature in Film Comment, Amy Taubin praised the film's political critique and its beauty, stating, “Sprawling, wildly beautiful, emotionally enveloping, Spoor earns its vision of utopia. It would not be the most resonant and inspiring political film of the century if it did not give us hope.” In a positive review for the Krakow Post Giuseppe Sedia wrote, "enriched with some majestic close-ups of wild animals caught in their natural habitat and framed à la Sergei Parajanov, Holland’s film is a sturdy environmental thriller film drenched in a very Czech black humor that could charm trappers and mushroom hunters alike".
The New York Times wrote that "each time The Onion publishes this particular headline, it seems to rocket around the internet with more force" and that the headline "with each use, seemed to turn from cheeky political commentary on gun control into a reverberation of despair." Mashable wrote that "[n]othing captures that feeling of frustration and powerlessness" following major mass shootings as well as these Onion articles, adding that "[t]here's no shortage of brilliant Onion pieces, but none have resonated—or been as tragically prescient—like the 'No Way' post." The Washington Post wrote that, with these articles, The Onion "appears to capture the frustration and futility felt by so many people" following mass shootings, noting the increased Internet traffic the articles draw and how popular they are on social media. The Huffington Post cites these articles as "some of the most resonant commentary on the nation's total lack of action on gun violence".
Sending her a new version of "Demon" (a long poem featuring some of the most resonant lines in the Russian language, which he rewrote several times), he several times crossed out the initials ВАБ and wrote instead ВАЛ in the dedication sent to the copyist. Lermontov, tormented by jealousy, alluded to Nikolay Bakhmetev several times in his writing with sardonic humor as a greybeard and cuckold. However, his stinging attacks on Bakhmetev were also transferred to his wife: Bakhmetev was also jealous and forbade his wife to speak of Lermontov, and made every effort to destroy her correspondence with the poet, so that the main source of information about their relationship after marriage is the poet's correspondence with Varvara's sister, Mariya Lopukhina. Sketch of Varvara Lopukhina, by Lermontov In 1839, to save all her materials associated with Lermontov from destruction, Varvara Bakhmeteva gave them to her friend Aleksandra Vereshchagina when she was at a European resort.
C-flat major is the home key of the harp, with all its pedals in the top position, and it is considered the most resonant key for the instrument. Thus, in Richard Strauss's Ein Heldenleben, the first cue for the harps is written in C-flat major even though the rest of the orchestra, having previously played in E-flat major, retains a 3-flat key signature and is now playing in B major, marked with the necessary sharps and naturals as accidentals. This use of C-flat major in harp parts when the rest of the orchestra is playing in B major is not exceptional: it is standard practice in orchestral music written in B major for harp parts to be notated in C-flat major. In Arnold Bax's symphonic poem Tintagel, the key is B major and again the harp part is always notated in C-flat major; but in this case the harp's key signature contains only 6 flats, and the necessary Fs are notated with accidentals.
Although many of its songs were written for Toy, and some are cover versions, biographers and critics of the time claimed that Heathen deals with Bowie's impressions of the 911 September attacks. The lyrics of songs such as "Slow Burn", "Afraid", "A Better Future" and "Heathen (The Rays)" focus on the degradation of mankind and the world in general, recalling his earlier album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars and the song "Five Years". Writing about the connection between the album and 9/11, Dave Thompson says: > Although we can probably credit nothing more spiritual than saturation-level > television coverage for its visceral impact, 9/11 remains the single most > resonant event in recent world history for many people, igniting so many > thoughts, fears and conflicts within the minds of those who witnessed it > that, even today, people who have never been to America, can still bond over > those 102 terrifying minutes. At the time, and through the months of > uncertainty that followed, the need for that bonding was even more > pronounced.
Directed since 1991 by James Lingwood and Michael Morris, it has commissioned and produced a string of notable site-specific works, plus several projects for TV, film, radio and the web. Notable past works include the Turner Prize-winning House by Rachel Whiteread (1993), Break Down by Michael Landy (2001) and Seizure by Roger Hiorns (2008–2010), also nominated for the Turner Prize in 2009. A 2002 article in The Daily Telegraph described the organisation as creating "art that operates by ambush, rather than asking you to pay up before you see it", while a 2007 profile in The Observer noted that "Artangel has worked with exceptional artists to produce some of the most resonant works of our time, in some very unusual places". These have included a condemned council flat (Seizure, 2008–2010), a former postal sorting office (Küba, 2005), a vacated general plumbing store (An Area of Outstanding Unnatural Beauty, 2002) and the former Oxford Street branch of the C&A; department store (Break Down, 2001).

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