Ear piercing instrument

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    The Fall of the House of Usher Edgar Allan Poe is best known for his unnerving and suspenseful writings, and “The Fall of the House of Usher” is no exception. Just like Poe’s other clever writings, “The Fall of the House of Usher” portrays a sense of fear and paranoia yet also a touch of curiosity with his extraordinary descriptions about the setting and characters, along with the tone. Poe does a magnificent job creating an eerie tone while describing the setting. Even in the first paragraph of

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    Concert Attendance Paper

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    MUS 121 Jeffrey Phelps, cello and Lee Jordan-Anders, piano 14 October, 2012 Dr. Ford Tidewater Community College CA#1 The Program Sonata in A Major, Opus 69 (1808) Ludwig van Beethoven Allegro, ma non tanto Scherzo, Allegro molto Adagio cantabile/Allegro vivace Sonata (1915) I.Prologue: Lent, sostenuto e molto risoluto II.Serenade: Moderement anime III.Final: Anime, leger

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    Sonny Boy Slim Thesis

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    jazzy not too bluesy not poppy not too rocky but very smooth. Songs such as "The Healing" gives you this big time rock feel with blues licks throughout the track. Something that stands out about this track is how much is actually going on with the instruments. In the rhythm section Gary is playing with a fuzz pedal and Flanger pedal giving you this spooky suspenseful sound also he's playing this somewhat continuing blues riffs. During the breakdown, Gary showcases his inner R&B side with some melodic

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    Throughout my first year of high school my mind was solely set on getting a tattoo. Being so young, my mother was very hesitant to allow me to permanently ink my skin. However, when I was ten, I went against my mother’s word by getting my second hole on my ears pierced even after she advised against it. Knowing my determination in getting the things I want, she made a deal with me. The deal being that I had to take a full year to consider the tattoo and if I was still fixed on it she would allow me. As the

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    Greek and Roman Influence in Psychology Virtually every branch of knowledge, as we know it today, came from particularly two powerful empires of the ancient past, which are the Greek and Roman Empire. Although there were other civilizations, such as the Arabs and the Mayans, that made progress in knowledge, especially mathematics, the Greeks and Romans have been more recognized for the development of other branches of knowledge. The Greeks and Romans have been known to be the promoters of the natural

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    theFiascoProject: An Origin Story At the beginning of second semester during my sophomore year, Eva approached me about some lyrics she had written. “I wrote a lot over break,” she said, shoving her hands in the pockets of her jeans and looking down at her SHOE. “I know you’re a music person, do you think we could work on this sometime?” We had met in art class earlier that year, where we quickly learned that we had more in common than we had initially thought. A friend of a friend, we ended up

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    Who was Miles Davis and why was he such an important element in the music of Jazz? Miles Davis, as we would know him, was born Miles Dewey Davis in Alton, Illinois on the 25th of May 1926 to a middle-class black family.. A couple of years later, Miles went on to St. Louis where he grew up. Since he was a youngster, Miles' hobby was to collect records and play them over without getting tired of them. Since his family knew Miles was so interested in the music of his time, primarily Jazz, for his thirteenth

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    Dido and Camilla - Leaders Blinded by their Passions in the Aeneid          In Book I of Virgil's Aeneid, Aeneas observes a depiction of the female warrior, Penthesilea, on the walls of Dido's temple. As Aeneas is looking at this portrait, Dido enters the temple. Later in Book XI, as Camilla walks through the carnage of battle, she is likened to an image of Penthesilea returning home victorious. Virgil presents many such similarities in his portrayals of Dido and Camilla

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    Analysis: The Horn Player

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    Walt gapes at the instrument. The horn blazes under the spotlights. Walt spills the rest of his ice down his chest, raising his hand to drink but forgetting that he has run dry. He staggers up to the bar, clutching the empty glass to his breast, his head wrenched backward.

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    Charles Frazier's Use of Music in Cold Mountain The American Civil War was a bitter, grief-filled conflict with oddly musical overtones. A Southern soldier, Alexander Hunter, recalled that “There was music in plenty,” (Lawrence 169) just as Charles Frazier’s character Stobrod in Cold Mountain remarks that “there was so much music back then” (407). While both the Union and the Confederacy placed great import on music, Cold Mountain by Charles Frazier focuses primarily on the Southern perspective

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