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Allushta [10]
3 years ago
15

I made this for my sis rate it pls

Arts
2 answers:
Masja [62]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

Explanation:

It’s really nice, also very creative. I think she will like it.

Akimi4 [234]3 years ago
3 0
10/10 very beautiful and I love the thought you put into it! I think she will love and cherish it forever.
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Select the correct answer.
Mice21 [21]

Answer:

b

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
Explain what the art historian does when describing analyzing interpreting and judging a work of art.
statuscvo [17]

Answer:When analyzing a work of art, art historians focus on questions of style.

Explanation:

7 0
3 years ago
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Describe early film and techniques
Marina CMI [18]

The first moving pictures, often called 'flickers,' were very, very short. A few seconds to a couple minutes of footage featured such commonplace scenes as a sneezing man, a kissing couple, a dance performance, a boxing match, or acts from Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show. Viewers typically watched these little films with a Kinetoscope.

As projection became commonplace, movies expanded in length. In the first decade of the 20th century, most films were one or two reels long, or about 10 to 15 minutes, and they began to contain storylines, characterization, and even basic special effects. Georges Méliès' films The Haunted Castle and A Trip to the Moon amused viewers with disappearing objects, double exposure tricks, and fadeouts. The 1903 flick The Great Train Robbery, the very first real Western, excited viewers with its action scenes and intrigued them with its creative camera work, including shots taken from a moving train.

For many years, film producers were hesitant to make movies longer than one or two reels because they thought audiences would grow restless watching longer films. As the 1910s approached, however, a few directors decided to take the risk with feature length films. Les Miserables and The Life of Moses were four and five reels respectively, but they were released in sections. In 1911, Dante's Inferno, a 69-minute film, was released in its complete form, followed in 1912 by Oliver Twist and Queen Elizabeth.

Other popular early films include:

The Life of an American Fireman, the first documentary

D.W. Griffith's epic post-Civil War drama Birth of a Nation, that actually inspired a resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan

Slapstick Keystone Comedies featuring the hilarious Keystone Kops

Serial movies, like The Adventures of Kathlyn, that held viewers' attention over multiple episodes

Cecil B. DeMille's fantastic epics, like The Ten Commandments and The King of Kings

The Lost World, the first science fiction film

Westerns, like director John Ford's The Iron Horse

Spooky films, including The Cat and the Canary

Canine star Rin Tin Tin's movies

Imports, like the Russian film Battleship Potemkin

Movie spectacles, like Fred Niblo's Ben-Hur

3 0
2 years ago
We have learned that there are five steps to reading a new piece of music. Can you name all five steps?
tamaranim1 [39]

Answer:Notes/Pitches. Articulation. Phrasing. Musical Extras.

Explanation:

6 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
The order of solos in this piece is: Gordon, Bunn, Callender, and Thompson (at end). Provide counter numbers for the beginnings
Blizzard [7]

Answer:

Blues Bikini?

Explanation:

I´ve been doing some research on Blue Bikini and noticed that Callender (bass player) doesn´t have a solo at all. So maybe Blues Bikini is not the right song, although it corresponds to the 44-bar AABA song in which the A section is 12 and the B section 8 bars, which makes 3 times 12 plus 8 = 44. Dexter Gordon (Tenor Saxophone) takes two choruses in which he display a lyrical approach to the theme-melody. Then Jimmy Bunn, the pianist takes over for 1 chorus of 48 bars (!). After 24 bars (2 A´s) his solo changes in the B section and all of the sudden you hear some sparse and lingering notes. The peculiar thing is that his B section turns out to be 12 bars, followed by yet another 12 (the last A section). In the 4th chorus Gordon comes back for two A´s and Thompson (on drums) fills in the B section of 8 bars, remarkably laid-back, after which Gordon ends the tune with the last 12 bar song A section.

A remarkable song from Dexter Gordon, a remarkable Saxophone player who, as Gene Lees once wrote, lost part of his magic when he moved to Europe.

8 0
3 years ago
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