Donate SIGN UP

Bbc Music Magazine No. 333

Avatar Image
susanwilton | 21:22 Sat 20th Apr 2019 | Crosswords
7 Answers
12a) A playful piece, involving Latin dancing and no sense of key (9) ??o?a?i?a
1d) Rising musical sense about to urge popular genre (6) r?g???

Last two. Could 1d be reggae?
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 7 of 7rss feed

Avatar Image
12a Atonality - anag 'Latin' (in) 'a toy' 1d Reggae - 'ear' (up, about) 'egg' (to urge)
21:30 Sat 20th Apr 2019
12a Atonality - anag 'Latin' (in) 'a toy'
1d Reggae - 'ear' (up, about) 'egg' (to urge)
Question Author
Thank you Lie-in King ... I have a problem with another now .... 5d) (a trio by Dvorak) of the French style, ends in glum dark key (5) I thought Dumka, (d?m?a) though the a is now a y from atonality. What do you think?
Question Author
Thank you Lie-in King ... I have a problem with another now .... 5d) (a trio by Dvorak) of the French style, ends in glum dark key (5) I thought Dumka, (d?m?a) though the a is now a y from atonality. What do you think? I was careless .... just seen dumky! Thank you Lie-in King
Dumky (plural of 'dumka') - 'du' (Fr. "of") + '(glu)m (dar)k (ke)y' (ends)
Dumky


Du + (glu)m (dar)k (ke)y

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/dumky

Du-m-k-y last letters of .....

Spanning the years 1875 to 1891, Dvorak's cycle of piano trios offers a fascinating guide to his musical development, from the hugely promising newcomer to the garlanded elder statesman of Czech music. The Gould Piano Trio gather these four works into a richly rewarding whole, from the fresh, gloriously melodic B flat trio to the gravelly quirky E minor "Dumky", via the profound Beethovian F minor and the plaintive G minor. Lucy Gould (violin), Alice Neary (cello) and Ben Frith (piano) deserve high praise for the consistently high standard of their playing and their revelatory interpretations.
I was careless as well, I just saw the last line of your post - glad you're sorted :-)

1 to 7 of 7rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Bbc Music Magazine No. 333

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.