释义 |
nounPlural talas ˈtɑːləˈtɑlə A traditional rhythmic pattern in classical Indian music. the piece was set to the rupaka tala Example sentencesExamples - There was nothing unusual about the ragas or talas that resounded in the Kasturi Srinivasan Auditorium in Music Academy on Saturday.
- Music came naturally to him, and even as a child, Shashikiran not only identified ragas but also complicated talas.
- By four she left listeners spellbound with her command of complicated ragas and talas.
- And Mr. Balamuralikrishna, one of the oldest Radel supporters, launched its newest gadget - an updated version of the ‘talometer’ (an electronic instrument that can be set to all 25 talas of Carnatic music).
- When I have to tune a song, I use the raga and tala indicated in the old books.
- Her hips punctuate the bass tala, her hands move like the suvit's serpentine melody, the rest of her dances with the flute and govind.
- The dignified movements of every limb of the actor are in tune with the tala.
- A tala (East Indian time cycle) is called out, starting the tablas and whipping the piece into a furious frenzy with some thunderous percussion at the end.
- She performed and made the audience familiar with the ‘pungloi joboi’ or the rhythm of the dance, besides the ‘tanchep,’ which included four beats with a stress and the ‘Brahma taal,’ 28 beats with 10 stresses.
- Through her fingers, the piece turns sprightly even before the tala (rhythmic section) leaps in.
- The talas, meaning the beats applied, often tend to be of very difficult matrixes.
- Perhaps this was justified, considering that the audience was expected to consist of laymen, not connoisseurs, who would not have been able to distinguish between one tala and another or their role in imparting the rasas.
- Those who really know their raags from their taals will probably be transported by the wit with which the internal changes of each piece are executed, but you don't need specialist knowledge to appreciate the vivacity of the disc.
- In their early ages, they have learnt the grammar of the ragas, the basics of laya, tala and technique together with a few patterns of tana.
- ‘Starting in samam, with the first word coinciding with the first beat of tala will not sound interesting,’ she warns her students, pointing out the grace in ‘eduppu’ gimmicks of pallavi singing.
- To that extent, her responsibility is to ensure that all allies are singing in the same raga and the same taal.
- His performance, voice, phrasing, sensitivity, alaap, bandishes, as well as total control over sur and taal contribute to his magnetic concerts.
- Her sparkling eyes and mischievous glance from under her bright saffron veil were delightful, and her footwork was sharp and true to the taal.
- Points would be awarded for timing; tonal quality of the original piece; breaking of the taal or changing from one beat to the next; overall discipline; and, stage presentation.
- A notable flaw in the performance was the absence of variety of talas as all the numbers embraced adi tala only.
Origin From Sanskrit tāla 'handclapping, musical time'. Rhymes Carla, challah, Douala, gala, Guatemala, Gujranwala, impala, kabbala, Kampala, koala, La Scala, Lingala, Mahler, Marsala, masala, nyala, parlour (US parlor), Sinhala, snarler, tambala, Uppsala nounPlural talasˈtɑːləˈtɑlə The basic monetary unit of Samoa, equal to 100 sene. Example sentencesExamples - The gap between imports and exports is mainly covered by 160m tala of remittances from overseas Samoans to their families or for churches and schools - almost three times what the country receives in foreign aid.
nounˈtɑlə A traditional rhythmic pattern in classical Indian music. the piece was set to the rupaka tala Example sentencesExamples - Her sparkling eyes and mischievous glance from under her bright saffron veil were delightful, and her footwork was sharp and true to the taal.
- A tala (East Indian time cycle) is called out, starting the tablas and whipping the piece into a furious frenzy with some thunderous percussion at the end.
- His performance, voice, phrasing, sensitivity, alaap, bandishes, as well as total control over sur and taal contribute to his magnetic concerts.
- Points would be awarded for timing; tonal quality of the original piece; breaking of the taal or changing from one beat to the next; overall discipline; and, stage presentation.
- A notable flaw in the performance was the absence of variety of talas as all the numbers embraced adi tala only.
- By four she left listeners spellbound with her command of complicated ragas and talas.
- Music came naturally to him, and even as a child, Shashikiran not only identified ragas but also complicated talas.
- Her hips punctuate the bass tala, her hands move like the suvit's serpentine melody, the rest of her dances with the flute and govind.
- And Mr. Balamuralikrishna, one of the oldest Radel supporters, launched its newest gadget - an updated version of the ‘talometer’ (an electronic instrument that can be set to all 25 talas of Carnatic music).
- She performed and made the audience familiar with the ‘pungloi joboi’ or the rhythm of the dance, besides the ‘tanchep,’ which included four beats with a stress and the ‘Brahma taal,’ 28 beats with 10 stresses.
- Through her fingers, the piece turns sprightly even before the tala (rhythmic section) leaps in.
- To that extent, her responsibility is to ensure that all allies are singing in the same raga and the same taal.
- There was nothing unusual about the ragas or talas that resounded in the Kasturi Srinivasan Auditorium in Music Academy on Saturday.
- The dignified movements of every limb of the actor are in tune with the tala.
- In their early ages, they have learnt the grammar of the ragas, the basics of laya, tala and technique together with a few patterns of tana.
- Those who really know their raags from their taals will probably be transported by the wit with which the internal changes of each piece are executed, but you don't need specialist knowledge to appreciate the vivacity of the disc.
- Perhaps this was justified, considering that the audience was expected to consist of laymen, not connoisseurs, who would not have been able to distinguish between one tala and another or their role in imparting the rasas.
- When I have to tune a song, I use the raga and tala indicated in the old books.
- ‘Starting in samam, with the first word coinciding with the first beat of tala will not sound interesting,’ she warns her students, pointing out the grace in ‘eduppu’ gimmicks of pallavi singing.
- The talas, meaning the beats applied, often tend to be of very difficult matrixes.
Origin From Sanskrit tāla ‘handclapping, musical time’. nounˈtɑlə The basic monetary unit of Western Samoa, equal to 100 sene. Example sentencesExamples - The gap between imports and exports is mainly covered by 160m tala of remittances from overseas Samoans to their families or for churches and schools - almost three times what the country receives in foreign aid.
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