-
If you are lucky, you will hear "Elvis" serenade the bride and groom.
BBC: Vintage Las Vegas
-
Mariachi bands have also been hired to serenade the pontiff at his arrival.
CNN: Mexico spends millions to greet pope
-
As before, the three mice, singing French cabaret songs and a bit of Dino, serenade each section of the movie.
NEWYORKER: Babe: Pig in the City
-
You can hire an Elvis impersonator to serenade you with "Blue Hawaii", or you could dress up like Marilyn Monroe.
BBC: Going to the chapel
-
Jim Radovic says his neighbor's 10 dogs would serenade their block in Hilo, Hawaii, at all hours before the antibark law.
WSJ: Hawaii Turns to Dog Shrink as 'Incessant Barkers' Cut Plea Deals
-
His honor was followed by a serenade from Wyclef Jean and Common.
NPR: Washington Wins 3 Trophies At NAACP Image Awards
-
The usual approach is to serenade engineers with online postings involving wandering monkeys or battling robots, which rapidly morph into fiendish challenges of math and logic.
FORBES: In Silicon Valley Talent War, Zombie Math Rules
-
After dark has its attractions as well: buskers stake out small spots of the pedestrian path to serenade the crowd with old-fashioned favourites and new-fangled hits.
BBC: Shopping in Chiang Mai
-
" Sara Mearns, on and off during the run due to injury, made burning impressions wherever she did appear, particularly leading the "waltz" of Balanchine's "Serenade.
WSJ: Restless Princess | The Sleeping Beauty | New York City Ballet | By Robert Greskovic
-
The 1930s-style Northern Belle, which tours the north on a varying schedule of routes, offers a similar experience, with the addition of strolling musicians who serenade passengers as they dine.
BBC: Five unforgettable rail journeys
-
With events like redneck horseshoes (tossing toilet seat covers), watermelon seed spitting and an armpit serenade, the games celebrate all the stereotypes that have surrounded rural Southerners over the years.
BBC: The Summer Redneck Games begin
-
Other major works for solo horn include the two concertos for horn and orchestra by Richard Strauss (the first from 1883, the second from 1942), and Benjamin Britten's Serenade for tenor (voice), horn, and strings (1943).
NPR: Young Tuba Player Gets Nod from Phila. Orchestra