omg i love that song and NF is one of my favourites!
In a keynote speech addressed to the Association of Theatre in Higher Education in 1992, performance studies scholar Richard Schechner (in)famously declared: “Theatre as we have known and practiced it – the staging of written dramas – will be the string quartet of the 21st century”. We are now more than two decades removed from this provocation. What, if anything, has changed about the state of theatre in the twenty-first century? Is theatre dead, as Schechner predicted, or is it still very much alive and breathing? In the spirit of retiring “Late Show” host David Letterman’s famous “Top Ten” lists, I submit the following reasons why theatre is still important today:
<span>#10 Human Beings</span>
There can't just be one best anime. There are a few good ones that I watch and they are Death Note, Amagi Brilliant Park, and Hellsing.
Answer:
drones, modes
Explanation:
In order to know more about the answer, let's get to know who John Tavener is.
John Tavener- He is an English composer who is known for his extensive output of religious works. He converted to the Russian Orthodox Church in 1977. He also had a subsequent experience of the Russian and Greek culture. This is the reason why much of his work has been influenced by Orthodox theology and liturgical traditions.
<em>Tavener's choral works </em>is characterized by the presence of drones and harmonies. A drone is a harmonic and monophonic effect or accompaniment. The note or chord in here is continuously sounded throughout most or all of the piece. On the other hand, a harmony refers to the simultaneously occurring frequencies, pitches or chords. The drones and harmonies in Tavener's choral works are based on Greek Orthodox modes. Mode, in music, refers to the ordering of the notes of a scale according to intervals. <em>Greek Orthodox mode</em> avoids progressions of major and minor harmony. This creates an almost static effect, which is stationary or fixed.