All I know is that syncopation is the technique of placing an accent on a normally weak beat. I have been in band for 3 years now and I am pretty sure it is the second one.
"Printers used woodcuts to print illustrations by the relief process and experimented with intaglio in copper engravings. Woodcut pictures were produced before metal types, and it was a simple development to make woodcuts in appropriate dimensions for use with type to print illustrated books." -Another website
<em>Rephrased:</em>
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Early printers used woodcuts to display images by the process of relief- this was experimented by intaglio in copper shapes and strokes. Woodcut photographs were made before mineral and metal options, and it was basic development to form woodcuts correctly to be used in making book illustrations and designs.
*Hope it helped :)
Answer:
From a musical point of view, this migration brought Gospel and blues music to a wider audience, and northern and western cities became a place for African American musical innovation. The search for a better life also led to changes in the way performers chose to present themselves. For example, singer Noble Sissle refused to perform in black face, which, at the time, was still common for African Americans. Marian Anderson, whose grandfather had migrated to Philadelphia shortly after emancipation, studied opera and, when she performed traditional spirituals, she did so in a trained vocal style. Composer Spencer Williams is an example of an African American who migrated from New Orleans to perform and live in Chicago and later New York during the Great Migration. Listen to his song, "I Ain't Got Nobody" performed by Hattie Ellis. Another wave of African Americans to the north and west occurred after World War II. An example is blues great Honeyboy Edwards, who left the Missisippi Delta to live and perform in Chicago in 1950. Listen to him sing "Sweet Home Chicago," a song believed to have been written by Robert Johnson.
Explanation:
https://library.ric.edu/c.php?g=907570&p=6549202
Hope this helps.
I think it looks amazing! I especially like the E square.