interpretively การใช้
- Perhaps because of debut jitters, she was interpretively a little pale.
- One floats with the musicians, interpretively speaking.
- But nothing he did seemed interpretively excessive.
- "It's not a huge jump for us interpretively with a new member.
- They also give him a distinctive profile that many technically proficient but interpretively faceless conservatory graduates lack.
- Like the first movement, the movement presents considerable challenges to the pianist throughout, both technically and interpretively.
- In a way, Mozart is more difficult than Rachmaninoff because you can't hide technically or interpretively in Mozart.
- Anyway, I think the books count as sources for themselves, so long as they are described non-interpretively.
- The original AMOS version was interpreted which, whilst working fine, suffered the same disadvantage of any language being run interpretively.
- The Masterworks Heritage CD includes Rabin's three Columbia records in their entirety, revealing an artist at once technically brilliant and interpretively sensitive.
- But his short-breathed, clumsily phrased, interpretively blank and often pinched and strained singing makes his Don Jose a tough listen ."
- One is of a young violinist, a well-trained, interpretively astute contest winner, who played a Mozart sonata at his debut recital.
- Many listeners find most current performers interpretively bland, and with classic recordings by legendary conductors available in pristine CD transfers and at midprice, collectors buy them instead.
- Another frequently heard criticism is that juries, however well-meaning, necessarily operate by consensus and therefore reward players who are interpretively bland enough to suit all tastes.
- Ms . Te Kanawa has always had detractors who find her to be interpretively bland, and some of the early reviews of this Mimi predictably describe her singing as cool.
- I don't mean to say that another conductor can't get us to play differently interpretively, but the quality remains the same as when Eschenbach is there ."
- Not just interpretively richer, which you would expect with maturity, but vocally richer, more expressive, with just as much, if not slightly more, bloom to the sound.
- Jules Feiffer's moody modern dancer, the comic strip figure who has leaped and stretched interpretively to spring, summer, autumn and winter for more than 40 years, is finally hanging up her tights.
- Alan Feinberg, the pianist, and Robert Cohen, the cellist, prove equally skillful solo partners in these interpretively difficult works, and the orchestra's alert and sensitive playing is all one could wish for.
- After years of listening to critics'complaining that so many young musicians'recordings are brilliantly polished but interpretively indistinguishable, record companies are taking some risks, signing players with strong personalities and individualistic approaches to the repertory.
- ตัวอย่างการใช้เพิ่มเติม: 1 2