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.
Hope this helps!
In a film's story, the director's vision has to be accomplished by all of the staff. Is that your question?
Answer:
here you go :)
Explanation:
In The Nutcracker 71a, you can hear the opening theme song, the nutcracker's march, dance of the sugar plum fairies, the russian dance, the arabian dance, the Chinese dance, the reed flutes, and waltz of the flowers. All of these play throughout the ballet to represent the different scenes in the production. You often hear the strings, brass/horns, and the use of a full orchestra. The tempo changes throughout the movement, depending on the scene and what goes on in the scene. Example, Waltz of The Flowers begins with a slow harp melody, but blossoms into a section led by the horns, followed by the main melody being dominated over the strings, and finally the full composition closing off with a full orchestra.