'Cause I'm a island boy, and I've been tryin' to may...
Oh I'm a island boy
Ay, I'mma just island boy, I'mma just island boy
I'mma get keep that gun, I be just staring at the sun
Nummies I'll foo
Milt Jackson collaborated with John Lewis, Ray Brown, and Kenny Clark in 1946 and began the musical band, The MJQ (Modern Jazz Quartet)
<h3>Who is Milt Jackson?</h3>
This refers to the multi-talented musician that played the vibraphone and vibraharp, and also the guitar which he has been playing since he was eleven years old.
Hence, we can see that your question is incomplete, so a general overview was given to give you a better understanding of the concept.
Read more about MJQ (Modern Jazz Quartet) here:
brainly.com/question/13786262
#SPJ1
Answer:
D. (I think since sculptures were frequently weathered down + erosion)
Explanation:
Samuel Beckett's work was heavily experimental drama. Some of his most significant work, such as his play <em>Waiting for Godot</em>, falls under the umbrella of absurdism, a genre of fiction focused on the futility of trying to find meaning in a chaotic world often devoid of it.
1.
It’s about a prince getting betrayed by a female
so he tries to end them all until he meets Scheherazade who tells him stories
every night and end up falling in love.
2.
He does this by always switching it up. I could
tell when the girl was talking versus the prince it was always different.
3.
How she managed to soothe the prince with her
voice and stories as music does to regular people.
4.
Yes, because I could tell exactly what was going
on. The stories went hand in hand together.
5.
Scheherazade was not conceited. She went to the
king to hopefully save the other girls’ lives. She knew she was risking her
own. She was kind and was really good at telling stories. I did like the music
since it captures every aspect of the story.