Sweetness call it lyricism is Oberst's great gift even when love turns sour.
The results are unclassifiable, but frequently buoyed by intense lyricism and thick, active grooves.
The simplicity of his language, the disarming lyricism, and acuity of perception define his greatness.
The lyricism was replaced with sharper, more jagged music which many people found difficult.
Lish had cut the original manuscript by forty per cent, eliminating what he saw as false lyricism and sentiment.
The movie builds up enormous tension through the simplest means and then bursts into a flight of exultant lyricism.
His style escapes simple genre classification, and the guitarist's music pits funky, spitfire lyricism against slide guitar and "open-tuning" riffs.
In it he fused the moods and melodies of Negro spirituals with a sort of expansive lyricism all his own.
A. absorbed the styles of everything from Jamaican patois to hip-hop lyricism, blending them together in her unique form of wordplay.
There are hints in his sound of John Coltrane's intensity and Lester Young's smoky lyricism, but Mr. Lloyd is a thoroughly original voice.
WSJ: He's Kept Growing | Charles Lloyd | Cultural Conversation by Stuart Isacoff
W. Scott, who managed part of the project and published its definitive history in 1906, rarely lets himself get swept away by lyricism.
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In his most famous structure, the 1958 Seagram building (for which the ever-industrious Philip Johnson did the interior spaces), Mies' lyricism is given epic form.
The remainder of the items vary in mood and subject, displaying Ms Ariale's agile touch and focused lyricism as well as the close interaction between the three players.
His Brahms demonstrates his lyricism and effortless sense of detail.
Though not overtly religious, the sentiment is morally correct and therefore Savonarola-suitable, as is the turbulent mood, so far removed from the sumptuous lyricism of Botticelli's earlier, mythological works.
What results most of the time is a sense of freedom, an airy lyricism that's never weighed down by the notion that careers or record sales hang in the balance.
The 1920-22 Irish revolt against the English, reimagined by the social realist Ken Loach as an awkwardly violent and sombre old poem made without the usual Irish flourishes of wildness or lyricism.
Visually, the 17th century was miles away, but the chorus and orchestra, anchored by a formidable continuo group, shaped this glorious score with all the lyricism and transparency that one might wish.
Not only was he gifted at crafting bass lines and functioning as a timekeeper in the bass' traditional role, but he also possessed a sense of lyricism and melody that allowed him to make the bass a viable solo instrument.
Jacques Rivette made his first feature with little funding and great difficulty between 1958 and 1960 and refracted his struggles into its plot, which combines the paranoid tension of the American film noir and the austere lyricism of the modern theatre.
Developed at Wagner's request at a time when the technical capabilities of modern brass instruments were being expanded, it enabled him to fill a gap in tone color between the mellow lyricism of the horns and the penetrating brilliance of the trombones.
WSJ: It Takes Brass to Play the Wagner Tuba | By Barbara Jepson | The Ring of the Nibelung
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