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The phrase "a solo of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a performance or piece of music that is meant to be played or sung by a single performer.
Example: "The concert featured a solo of Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata, showcasing the pianist's exceptional talent."
Alternatives: "a performance of" or "a piece by".
Exact(49)
Whiffenpoof auditoners must sing a solo of their choosing.
Ms. Brown ends the work with a solo of her own.
Constantly changing directions, Donald Jackson was nonchalant in a solo of his own.
She created a choreographic fit of giggles in "Satyric Festival Song," a solo of 1932.
In Winter, she performs a solo of squiggling arms and tight hops that, while percussive, flows like water.
Eventually Mr. Haynes took over, with a solo of quick and startling intensity, a Florida thunderstorm hijacking a midsummer afternoon.
Similar(11)
"Doctors no longer have any value," complains a solo practitioner of 30 years, Dr. Philip Alper of Burlingame, Calif.
A solo exploration of the outer reaches of the 1980s polyphonic synthesiser, the Moog Memorymoog.
Ne-Yo included a solo version of the song on his album Year of the Gentleman.
The ghost of Dickens gets a star turn in a solo version of "A Christmas Carol" at the Canal Park Playhouse.
I am currently working on a solo version of Paradise Lost.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com