Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Mike Oldfield used a fragment of the piece in his track "Romance" on his 2005 album Light + Shade. The Buck 65 song "The Outskirts" from the 2007 album Situation uses this piece as backing. Cantopop singer Eason Chan included this piece on his 2011 album title release, Stranger Under My Skin. It is a bilingual English and Cantonese song with ...
The term romance (Spanish: romance/romanza, Italian: romanza, German: Romanze, French: romance, Russian: романс, Portuguese: romance, Romanian: romanţă) has a centuries-long history. Applied to narrative ballads in Spain, it came to be used by the 18th century for simple lyrical pieces not only for voice, but also for instruments alone.
The particular work in question here, is in fact strictly an original guitar piece (with arrangements being mentioned in the article: link). Anyone looking for information on the work would include the word "guitar" in a google search: e.g. Romance guitar and not Romance composition. A move to Romance (guitar piece) would be the most appropriate.
Google Translate is a multilingual neural machine translation service developed by Google to translate text, documents and websites from one language into another. It offers a website interface, a mobile app for Android and iOS, as well as an API that helps developers build browser extensions and software applications. [3]
Romance (guitar piece) Romance for bassoon (Elgar) Romance in A minor (Bruch) ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; ...
Note that Hindi–Urdu transliteration schemes can be used for Punjabi as well, for Gurmukhi (Eastern Punjabi) to Shahmukhi (Western Punjabi) conversion, since Shahmukhi is a superset of the Urdu alphabet (with 2 extra consonants) and the Gurmukhi script can be easily converted to the Devanagari script.
The show is composed of two acts linked only by the common theme of love and one song performed in both acts. The first, The Little Comedy, is based on a short story by Arthur Schnitzler and explores the budding relationship between two people who have adopted personas other than their own.
Romance S.169, the theme of which is based on the song "O pourquoi donc" ("Why, oh Why"), is a piece of music written in 1848 by the Hungarian composer Franz Liszt during a visit to Moscow. It bears some resemblance to Chopin's Nocturne in E minor , [ 1 ] as both pieces commence with broken E-minor chords.