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80 Sentences With "watch your step"

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

"Do research, be vigilant, and watch your step," he said.
Guides remind you to watch your step as gravel crunches underfoot.
In some San Francisco neighborhoods, hold your nose, and watch your step.
Watch your step so you don't get caught in the snags and brambles.
"Watch your step," someone called out as the group neared a dead rat.
You have to watch your step, otherwise you fall, and there's no character like that.
Watch your step, not your phone Can't put that phone away while walking down the street?
Please watch your step -- and not the game -- while you're walking at the field or stadium.
There's plenty to admire about jellyfish — just make sure to watch your step if you see one.
You'll want to watch your step — the boat ramp is covered in slippery algae at low tide.
So when your personal smart robot assistant thing comes knocking, watch your step… (and update your firmware, idiot).
You better watch your step, mister — or next they'll hit you with a notarised complaint and then BOOM!
"They were sprinkled all around the apartment, so you really had to watch your step," Ms. Kalman said.
Well, now, he might be packing a Golden Gun, which kills with one bullet, so watch your step, mister.
WATCHYour Step-By-Step Guide to Making Homemade Pizza from Scratch Other foods made their go-to list, too.
A word is hidden in four of the black squares, and Ms. Smith and Ms. Gray are warning you to watch your step.
"What I had in my mind was kind of a friendly suggestion — a very wise man saying, 'Watch your step here,'" Pace tells Mashable.
In the meantime, watch your step if you're surrounded by any peanut shells, puddles of spilled beer, or even a good ol' banana peel.
Follow your heart, but remember: Your mind is a bit foggy thanks to Mercury retrograde, so watch your step as you make any spontaneous moves.
A big boost in energy arrives this evening, encouraging you to get shit done, Pisces—but watch your step, as you may be accident-prone today.
And it's where my little boy hopefully learned life lesson No. 1 — watch your step — when he saw his dad step in a yellow jacket's nest.
The huge circular patterns are likely connected to heat rising from deeper lake water and thinning the ice—"a good sign to watch your step carefully," Leppäranta says.
Watch your step once you get down there: You're underneath a dock and there are several gaps in the walkway that lead straight to the salty, chilled water below.
This got me off on a totally different course, which ultimately allowed the puzzle to be configured with all snakes either beginning or ending in the "WATCH YOUR STEP!" reveal.
" The song has two contrasting sections — one clinically spoke-sung, one ominously cheerful — as the lyrics note "the collective hive mind algorithmically scanning" and warn "Ooh, you better watch your step.
Inside, you admire the incredible murals on the walls,  like Wojnarowicz's cow or Luis Frangella's expressionistic torsos, but you know you have to watch your step because the risk of falling through to the water is real.
Pass by an officer on the street and he will snap his head in your direction, warn you to watch your step, and end with a diminutive put-down like "boy" even as Clay towers feet above him.
They are composed of ice and look sleek enough to skate on, but you'd better watch your step: Some of the ice particles are as small as grains of sand, and others are as substantial as a mountain range.
Watch Your Step is a 1982 album by Ted Hawkins, a collection of previously recorded songs.
Among their shows were The Sunshine Girl (1913) and Watch Your Step (1914), which boasted Irving Berlin's first score, written for the Castles. In this extravaganza, the couple refined and popularized the Foxtrot. After its New York run, Watch Your Step toured through 1916.Golden, pp.
Watch Your Step is the compilation album of earlier releases and rarities songs of hardcore band Raised Fist.
By 1965 The Castaways became The Jackson Kings playing R&B;, with Cadd on piano and Ronnie Charles on vocals they recorded two singles "Watch Your Step" and "Watermelon Man" by April 1966.
"Watch Your Step" is a song written by new wave musician Elvis Costello and performed by Costello and the Attractions on their 1981 album, Trust. Originating from lyrics he wrote as a 20-year-old, "Watch Your Step" was inspired by Costello's experiences on tour as well as by dub music. The song was originally a louder rock song, but the final released version is slower and quieter. The song was released in the US as the sole single from Trust in 1981.
Green Book Magazine, January, 1916: > Sherlock Holmes couldn't find a plot in "Stop! Look! Listen!" the new Irving > Berlin revue at the Globe. In comparison, "Watch Your Step" was a novel by > Alexandre Dumas.
The Ghost of Verdi then appeared to protest the ragging of his "Rigoletto" to no avail. "Watch Your Step" marked the first time a Tin Pan Alley composer moved "uptown" to Broadway with a complete score.
David Hyland of WPR noted that the song was one of the tracks Costello performed at a 2015 show in Madison that "offered many opportunities for Nieve to impress", noting that Nieve's performance on "Watch Your Step" "featured several exquisite runs".
Criner eulogized Maceo Anderson at his "Home-going" celebration. His favorite song was "When the Saints Go Marching In." And, Anderson's all- time favorite saying was, "Watch your step, brother!" Dr. Terry Criner continues in ministry today as Bishop of Holy Tabernacle Outreach Mission, Inc.
"Watch Your Step" was released as the only single from Trust in America; in the UK, "Clubland" and "From a Whisper to a Scream" were released instead. The B-side was "Luxembourg", though a 12-inch single instead featured Costello's interview with Tom Snyder on the B-side. The single failed to chart in the US. The song has since appeared on compilation albums The Best of Elvis Costello and the Attractions, Girls Girls Girls, and The Very Best of Elvis Costello and The Attractions 1977–86. "Watch Your Step" has seen critical acclaim and has been named by many writers as a highlight of Trust.
Carmela is deeply hurt and, after an argument, storms out. Her last words are, "You'd better watch your step." When her father suggests that she look for other men, Carmela replies that, as Tony's wife, her motives will always be distrusted. Tony B tries to adjust to civilian life.
"In the old House" quotes from "Die Widerspenstigkeit Unerwünschter Gedanken". "At Sunset Through The Fields Aflame" is an instrumental reprise of Voyager's "Feralia Genetalia". "Through Your Eyes" is a remake of "Watch Your Step". In October 31, 2018 she released a single called When You Love A Man: Reprise.
"New Lace Sleeves" often appears in Costello's live setlist as one of his deeper cuts. Costello performed the song on Tomorrow with Tom Snyder in 1981, along with "Watch Your Step". A life performance from a 1981 show at the Tower Theater in Philadelphia has been uploaded by Paste Magazine.
During the montage of Homer and Marge tracking Bart the Elvis Costello song "Watch Your Step" is playing, while Bart's golf ball recovery montage is set to Merle Haggard's "Workin' Man Blues". The title is also a reference to the telecommunications company Verizon Communications, and the novel and film Lost Horizon.
Watch Your Step is a 1922 American silent comedy film directed by William Beaudine. It stars Cullen Landis, Patsy Ruth Miller, Bert Woodruff, and George C. Pearce. Life considered the film to be a "fabulously expensive production". With no record of a print in any collection, it is likely a lost film.
Robert Lee "Bobby" Parker (August 31, 1937 – October 31, 2013) was an American blues-rock guitarist, singer, and songwriter. He is best known for his 1961 song "Watch Your Step", a single for the V-Tone record label which reached the Billboard Hot 100; the song was performed by, and influenced, the Beatles among others.
Side one # "A Giant Crab Comes Forth" (Johnny Fairchild, Bill Holmes) – 2:18 # "It Started with a Little Kiss" (Ernie Orosco) – 2:30 # "Directions" (E. Orosco) – 3:03 # "Watch Your Step" (E. Orosco) – 2:37 # "Intensify Your Soul" (E. Orosco, Ruben Orosco) – 2:30 # "Enjoy It" (Scott English, C. Ogerman) – 2:04 # "Hot Line Conversation" (E.
Dave Lifton of Ultimate Classic Rock named the song as the fourth best Elvis Costello song, stating, "The ominous 'Watch Your Step,' with a subdued performance by the Attractions and Costello's voice barely rising above a whisper, is the best [on Trust]". The Daily Telegraphs Martin Chilton ranked the song number 31 on his top 40 list of best Costello songs.
"Watch Your Step" has been performed live by Costello regularly since its release. Costello debuted the song in his live setlist during the Get Happy tour. Costello also performed the song on The Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder in 1981 to promote Trust. He cited the appearance as "return[ing] us from our exile from US television" after his 1979 controversy.
His album Still Rising was released on October 16, 2007. In 2009, Jeru started to collaborate with drum and bass producers. In 2009, he is featured on Kabuki's track "Watch Your Step", produced by Mainframe and also on "Open Up Their Eyes" by Italian producer Fabio Musta. He also collaborated with Group Home in 2010 for a song, "Guru" dedicated to the late rapper Guru.
Later that night at 2:00 am McKetta received a phone call at his house from a disguised voice. The person stated what time he left his office and the exact route he took to his house. He then spoke of how easy it would be to kill him. After this he and his family received other phone calls that said things along the lines of "watch your step" and so on.
I think people would be surprised, but we don't have a lot of out-takes where people fall about laughing. I can think of only one time in four years when that's happened. The rest of the time if you make a mistake you say, 'Oops, sorry', and you do it again and get it right." He described Summer Bay as a "deadly little place" and said "You've really got to watch your step.
The "bubbling, playful and upbeat" opener "Watch Your Step" is "a charismatic breakbeat romp" that "morphs" into syndrum-assisted disco-house with "a thin layer of crispy distortion". Kelis "confirms her place as a dancefloor queen" over soulful-electronica and off-kilter synths. DJ Channel Tres "[oozes] confidence" with a "breathy purr" over the Daft Punk/Neptunes-evoking "Lavender". The disco-y song is fast-paced with an "intriguing, industrial- esque instrumental".
In addition to her prolific career as an illustrator, in 1914 Dryden launched a successful career as a costume designer. She designed scenery and costumes for the musical comedy Watch Your Step, followed by designs for several other stage plays including Clair de Lune, the fanciful drama based loosely on a Victor Hugo romance. Although the play starred Lionel and Ethel Barrymore, Helen Dryden's costume designs were generally given equal credit for the play's success.
They dropped their first group track on Boot Camp Clik's 1997 album For the People, with the song "Watch Your Step". The duo appeared on multiple tracks on Heltah Skeltah's 1998 album Magnum Force, and followed up in 1999 with an appearance on O.G.C.'s The M-Pire Shrikez Back. Later in 1999, they released their debut album Angels of Death on Warlock Records, featuring appearances from multiple Boot Camp Clik members. The album is now out of print.
Janice Wylie's father, Max Wylie, penned a book "Career Girl, Watch Your Step!", a year after the murders, warning career girls of safety and the need to be aware and "feel threatened" as a defence. Like Max Wylie, everyone initially believed that the attacks were against women who had careers, as both of the victims fit that profile. Women, specifically white women, were left to feel vulnerable despite their desire to gain freedom and independence through their careers.
Studio outtakes from the Led Zeppelin II sessions reveal that the drum solo recorded was edited down from a much longer version. The guitar riff can be traced back to the BBC unused session track "The Girl I Love She Got Long Black Wavy Hair" which was recorded in the summer of 1969. The riff is also similar to that of Bobby Parker's 1961 single, "Watch Your Step", although the progression is in a different key and tempo.
Watch Your Step is a musical with music and lyrics by Irving Berlin and a book by Harry B. Smith. It was Irving Berlin's debut musical. "Play a Simple Melody" and "They Always Follow Me Around" as well as "When I Discovered You" and "The Syncopated Walk" were introduced by this musical. A highlight of the show was the Act II Finale, "Opera in Modern Time" in which melodies from famous operas were turned into popular dances of the time.
"Clubland" was not released as a single in the United States, where "Watch Your Step" was released instead. The "Clubland" single was a chart disappointment, only reaching number 60 on the British charts. This ended Costello's streak of nine Top 40 British singles that he had held since "Watching the Detectives" reached number 15. The second British single from Trust, "From a Whisper to a Scream", failed to chart at all, despite the guest appearance of Squeeze singer Glenn Tilbrook.
"Play a Simple Melody" is a song from the 1914 musical, Watch Your Step, words and music by Irving Berlin. The show was the first stage musical that Berlin wrote. It ran for 175 performances at the New Amsterdam Theater in New York City. The one song from it that is well-remembered today is "Play a Simple Melody," one of the few true examples of counterpoint in American popular music — a melody running against a second melody, each with independent lyrics.
Eve, Lake and Hunte left before their single "Ain't No Way to Treat a Lady" (1979) was released. In 1980 and after five years with the band Lenny Zakatek left to sing vocals with The Alan Parsons Project. The band's follow- up singles and their fifth album Watch Your Step, were not successful and the group lost its major label status. Gonzalez then worked with Pye Records and concentrated on live performances, usually backing R&B;, funk and soul stars, such as Freddie King.
So watch your step for this musical giant is out to intensify your soul. The giant crab's only hope is that you will enjoy it enough to become involved in a hot line conversation that will spread :across the land. If you or I enjoy being the boy or girl it is our duty to inform Lydia Purple and the rest of the world...Flash...It has just been reported that :the giant crab is about to invade Groovy Towne inland, coming thru the fields. The chance you take is yours alone.
Brice was born Bessie S. Shaler in Findlay, Ohio, on February 21, 1883 to John Shaler and Fannie C. Wise.Ohio, Births and Christenings Index, 1774-1973 In March 1901, shortly after her 18th birthday, she married Fred J. Wilkinson in Essex, Ontario, Canada.Ontario, Canada, Marriages, 1826-1936 In the 1910s, Brice was the most frequent partner of Charles King, with whom she appeared in The Slim Princess, A Winsome Widow, Watch Your Step and Miss 1917. When they performed together in vaudeville they were known as Brice and King.
Born Florence Leonora Stewart in Bloomsbury, London, daughter of a chorus singer named Margaret Stewart and an unknown father, Carleton was raised by her aunt, Catherine Joliffe.Hoare, Philip. "Carleton, Billie (1896–1918)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 31 January 2012 Carleton left home at 15 to work on the stage and received her first break when the impresario C.B. Cochran promoted her from the chorus to a role in his 1914 revue Watch Your Step. According to Cochran, despite having a weak voice, Carleton had a good stage presence, and her delicate beauty charmed the audience.
Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone noted the song as well as "Watch Your Step" as "the album's undisputed twin highlights", while the Rolling Stone Album Guide described "New Lace Sleeves" as a "great song" where Costello "finally comes clean about his woman problems". Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic called the track a "highlight" of Trust and Blender praised Costello's "peerless acid tongue" on the song. Jim Beviglia of American Songwriter ranked "New Lace Sleeves" as the eighth best Elvis Costello song ever, calling the song the "towering peak" of Trust and "a magnificent song on which he was clearly more inspired than impaired".
On June 3, 2019, Kelis released her second studio album, Wanderland, to streaming services, finally making it available 18 years after its European release. On November 19, 2019, Kelis announced the Kaleidoscope 20th Anniversary Tour, a UK and European tour celebrating the 20th anniversary release of her debut album Kaleidoscope that will take place in March 2020. On November 22, 2019, Kelis revealed to i-D magazine that she was working on a new EP due in 2020, On May 21, 2020, it was confirmed Kelis would be featured on a Disclosure song titled "Watch Your Step", which was released in August 2020.
The couple reached the peak of their popularity in Irving Berlin's first Broadway show, Watch Your Step (1914), in which they refined and popularized the Foxtrot. They also helped to promote ragtime, jazz rhythms and African-American music for dance. Irene became a fashion icon through her appearances on stage and in early movies, and both Castles were in demand as teachers and writers on dance. After serving with distinction as a pilot in the British Royal Flying Corps during World War I, Vernon died in a plane crash on a flight training base near Fort Worth, Texas, in 1918.
In 1915, Vernon determined to fight in the war and began flight school in the U.S., leaving the touring cast of Watch Your Step. He received his pilot's certificate in early 1916. The Castles gave two farewell performances at the Hippodrome in New York in January 1916, accompanied by John Philip Sousa and his band.Golden, chapter 24 Vernon sailed for England to enlist as a pilot in the Royal Flying Corps during World War I.Golden, chapter 25 Flying over the Western Front, he completed 300 combat missions,"Vernon Castle Airplane Crash Site Memorial", RoadsideAmerica.com, accessed February 13, 2014 shot down two aircraft and was awarded the Croix de Guerre in 1917.
Lyrically, the songs are full of Costello's signature word play, to the point that he later felt he had become something of a self-parody and toned it down on later releases; he has mockingly described himself in interviews as "rock and roll's Scrabble champion". His only 1980 appearance in North America was at the Heatwave festival in August near Toronto. In January 1981, Costello released Trust amidst growing tensions within the Attractions, particularly between Bruce and Pete Thomas. In the U.S., the single "Watch Your Step" was released and played live on Tom Snyder's Tomorrow show, and received airplay on FM rock radio.
It reached no.51 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1961, although it did not make the national R&B; chart. It was later covered by several British acts including the Spencer Davis Group, Manfred Mann, Dr. Feelgood, Steve Marriott, Adam Faith, and also by Carlos Santana, and was performed by the Beatles in concerts during 1961 and 1962. The song's guitar riff inspired the introduction to the Beatles' 1964 hit single "I Feel Fine",Scott Freiman, "10 Things You Didn't Know About the Beatles' Music: The Intro to 'I Feel Fine' Was Borrowed from Bobby Parker's 'Watch Your Step'", Rolling Stone. Retrieved 3 November 2013 and, according to John Lennon, also provided the basis for "Day Tripper".
Costello first demoed "From a Whisper to a Scream" at producer Nick Lowe's Am-Pro Studio in Shepherd's Bush. The song was one of the first written for Trust, alongside tracks such as "New Lace Sleeves" and "Watch Your Step". Like many of Costello's songs during this period, "From a Whisper to a Scream" makes references to drinking, punning on the English expression "one over the eight"—a phrase that means being excessively intoxicated—with the lyric "But the one over the eight seems less like one or more like four". "From a Whisper to a Scream" features Squeeze singer and guitarist Glenn Tilbrook, who shares the lead vocals on the track with Costello.
Dear Little Girly, Girly sheet music featuring a photo of Levey Levey made her professional debut in San Francisco, in Charles H. Hoyt's A Milk White Flag in 1897. She appeared regularly on vaudeville programs in New York and on tour. After marrying George M. Cohan, she continued performing with him, in The Governor's Son (1901 and 1906), Running for Office (1903), Little Johnny Jones (1904), and George Washington Jr. (1906)."Ethel Levey", AllMusic. After their divorce, her Broadway appearances included roles in Nearly a Hero (1908),"Scenes in Sam Bernard's New Piece, 'Nearly a Hero'", Theatre Magazine (April 1908), p. 91 Watch Your Step (1914), Go Easy, Mabel (1922), Sunny River (1941), and Marinka (1945).
According to Costello, "Watch Your Step" originated from lyrics that he wrote in the mid-70s, when he was 20 years old. Costello had copied these lyrics from notebook to notebook for over five years until he "found their rightful home". The lyric "Listen to the hammers falling in the breaker's yard" reference a memory Costello had of watching the scrapping of steam locomotives on the news when he was a child. Other lyrics derived from his experiences on tour; references to "carnival desires" were, according to Costello, "just a picturesque way of saying that you might have to choose between chasing the wrong girl and avoiding gangs of lads shouting abuse and spewing into the gutters".
After attending Valley Forge High School, Matthew Ryan arrived on the music scene on September 23, 1997 with May Day, produced by David Ricketts (Sheryl Crow, Meredith Brooks) and released on A&M; Records. Drawing on such influences like John Cougar Mellencamp, Ryan showed a lot of potential on his debut album. Allmusic concluded, "The native of Chester, PA (near Philadelphia) was 25 at the time, but this is such a mature, emotionally honest effort that one got the impression he'd done more living than usual during his 25 years. Ryan's voice is rough and has a very lived-in quality that proves most appropriate on such tales of loss, disappointment, and hurt as "Watch Your Step," "Chrome," and "Lights of the Commodore Barry.
The lyric "Backslapping drinkers cheer the heavyweight brawl" comes from, as Costello explained, "the kind of dubious lodgings [on tour] where the police drank after hours with local ne'er-do- wells and the bar didn't close until dawn". Costello finished writing "Watch Your Step" in the summer of 1980, before the recording of the Trust album. A demo of the song was created during this same time; at the time, the song was, according to Costello biographer Graeme Thomson, a "raucous rocker", contrasting with the final version that Costello described as "a slow dance number". The song's use of melodica was, according to Costello, inspired by dub music; a planned guitar solo for the song was scrapped in its place.
Rick Anderson of AllMusic described the track as "a song that is unsettling and slightly scary, but still great for singing along to" and wrote that the song "proved a couple of things: first, that [Costello] really did know how to write for his own voice, and second, that his voice really wasn't all that bad". Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone noted the song as well as "New Lace Sleeves" as "the album's undisputed twin highlights". Noel Murray and Keith Phipps of The A.V. Club named the song as a highlight from Trust and called it "beguilingly paranoid". Jim Miller of Newsweek wrote, "On 'Watch Your Step' he builds a complex mood out of the title's admonition, turning the song into a bittersweet tribute to suspicion".
While sales were initially slow following the release of the album's debut single, "Watch Your Step", Elektra released the mid-tempo ballad, "Sweet Love", which became her first pop hit, reaching number eight on the Billboard Hot 100 and also reaching the UK Top 20. The album eventually launched three further hit singles, including "Caught Up in the Rapture", "No One in the World" and "Same Ole Love (365 Days a Year)". Throughout 1986 and 1987, Baker promoted the album by touring, headlining her first tour, The Rapture Tour, a show from which was later released on home video as A Night of Rapture. By 1988, the album had sold over 8 million copies worldwide, 5 million of which were sold in the United States alone.
255 Page offered an advance of US$2000 to fund the recording of a demo tape, but Parker never completed the recording, and an opportunity for Parker to be exposed to an international audience was lost. On January 1, 2012, Parker's "Watch Your Step" sound recording became Public Domain in Europe, due to the 50 year copyright law limit in the E.U. For the next two decades, Parker played almost exclusively in the D.C. area. By the 1990s, he started to record again for a broader audience. He recorded his first official album, Bent Out of Shape, for the Black Top Records label in 1993, with a follow-up in 1995, Shine Me Up. In 1993, he also was the headliner for the Jersey Shore Jazz and Blues Festival.
Like a Corpse... was created in response to the high prices fans would have to pay on eBay for bootlegged copies of out of print EPs and albums. John A. Rivers, who personally oversaw the remastering of the first six Sopor Aeternus albums, as well as the two to follow (2003's "Es reiten die Toten so schnell" (or: the Vampyre sucking at his own Vein) and 2004's "La Chambre D'Echo" - Where the dead Birds sing) supervised and remastered the contents of this box set. The set also included the concurrently released single, "The Goat" / "The Bells have stopped ringing". Barring the aforementioned single and demo tape, four previously unreleased songs were included: "White Body", "Watch your Step", "As Fire kissed the Echo Twins" and "The Widow's Dream"; the last of which is based on the Rozz Williams song "A Widow's Dream".
There is a song, "I Love a Piano," > strikingly reminiscent of "Alexander's Rag-time Band," accompanied by eight > men at as many pianos, the effect of which is not less striking because the > thing was done at a Friars' Frolic. A Vogue cover opens and closes to show > six beautiful girls in six beautiful gowns; there is a cleverly contrived > policeman's dance, programmed "The Law Must Be Obeyed;" and to take the > place of the rag-time grand opera in "Watch Your Step," there is a rag-time > melodrama. R. H. Burnside's contribution to all this is some exceptionally > interesting "business" and some attractive grouping. Ernest Albert and Homer > Emens painted the two most wonderful of nine wonderful scenes, and the > dresses, particularly those worn by the chorus in a song called "The Hula > Hula," beggar description.
Marguerite Martyn sketched the Castles dancing the maxixe in 1914. Lucile for Watch Your Step, 1914 As America's premier dance team, the Castles were trendsetters in a number of arenas. Their enthusiasm for dance encouraged admirers to try new forms of social dance. Considered paragons of respectability and class, the Castles specifically helped remove the stigma of vulgarity from close dancing. The Castles’ performances, often set to ragtime and jazz rhythms, also popularized African-American music among well-heeled whites. The Castles appeared in a newsreel called Social and Theatrical Dancing in 1914 and wrote a bestselling instructional book, Modern Dancing, later that year. The pair also starred in a feature film called The Whirl of Life (1915), which was well received by critics and public alike. As the couple's celebrity increased in the mid-1910s, Irene Castle became a major fashion trendsetter, initiating the vogue for shorter, fuller skirts and loose, elasticized corsets.
He added a subtle harmonica in the background, to give the film a "rustic, deglamorized sound that suits the anti-heroic sentiments" expressed by the story. According to Russian film historian Harlow Robinson, building the score around a single folk tune was typical of many Russian classical composers. Robinson adds that the source of Tiomkin's score, if indeed folk, has not been proven. The Encyclopedia of Modern Jewish Culture, on page 124, states: "The fifty-year period in the USA between 1914, the start of the First World War and the year of Irving Berlin's first full score, Watch Your Step, and 1964, the premiere of Bock and Harnick's Fiddler on the Roof, is informed by a rich musical legacy from Yiddish folk tunes (for example Mark Warshavsky's "Di milners trem," The miller's tears: and Dimitri Tiomkin's "Do Not Forsake Me." High Noon) ... " Tiomkin won two more Oscars in subsequent years: for The High and the Mighty (1954), directed by William A. Wellman, and featuring John Wayne; and The Old Man and the Sea (1958), adapted from an Ernest Hemingway novel.

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