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Etymologies
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Examples
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'Romanze' (ground cover) A rumpled affair you'll either love or hate with rounded apple-green leaves mottled in darker green (1979, Germany).
Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph 2009
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In addition, audiences will be treated to Joachim's own Romanze, Opus 2 and his Sostenuto and Andante Cantabile from "Hebrew Melodies," Opus 9, after Lord Byron.
Inspired by Joseph Joachim Barrymore Laurence Scherer 2012
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His rendition strides forth strongly and features a warm and lovely violin solo in the Romanze, a well-contrasted Scherzo, and a very effective finale with excellent pacing and flow.
Schumann on CD Mark J. Estren 2010
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His rendition strides forth strongly and features a warm and lovely violin solo in the Romanze, a well-contrasted Scherzo, and a very effective finale with excellent pacing and flow.
Schumann on CD Mark J. Estren 2010
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The stellar line-up of performers included Placido Domingo ( "Ombra mai fu" from Serse); Anna Netrebko ( "Nightingale and the Rose -- Oriental Romance"); Nathan Gunn (Romanze from Rosamunde); and Natalie Dessay ( "Ich wollt ein Strausslein binden").
Arlene M. Roberts: Sunday Afternoon at the Metropolitan Opera 2008
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Romanzen-Dichter_, Karlsruhe, 1845, contains: (1) "Romanze von der weissen Rose," (2) "Der Tanz mit dem Tode," (3) "Der Bergknapp,"
Graf von Loeben and the Legend of Lorelei Allen Wilson Porterfield
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Marie Elizabeth, of the same principality, counts among her works an "Einzugsmarsch" for orchestra, a Torch Dance for two pianos, a number of piano pieces, and a Romanze for clarinet and piano.
Woman's Work in Music Arthur Elson
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From your Romanze I again see plainly that we are to be man and wife.
The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 2 Rupert Hughes 1914
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The étude called "Castor and Pollux" is a vigorous number with the chords of the left hand exactly doubled in the right; another étude, "A Romanze," is noteworthy for the practice it gives in a point which is too much ignored even by the best pianists; that is, the distinction between the importance of the tones of the same chord struck by the same hand.
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From your Romanze I again see plainly that we are to be man and wife.
The Love Affairs of Great Musicians Hughes, Rupert, 1872-1956 1903
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