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Censored bloggers often say their posts have been "harmonized" — a term directly derived from President Hu Jintao's regular exhortations for Chinese citizens to create a harmonious society.
The Jazzyfatnastees gently harmonized a soul ballad about an undeserving man, and reappeared to sing choruses behind Mr. Kweli and the Roots.
Son by Four and 98 Degrees each harmonized a ballad, with Son by Four emoting harder as its song switched into Spanish.
Twirling in private-school uniforms, Criss and a chorus of beautiful boys harmonized a cappella, a fantasy of gay male solidarity.
Instead of playing the introduction, or any instrumental accompaniment, ensemble members put down their ukuleles and sang a richly harmonized a cappella backing to George Hinchliffe's vaudevillian lead vocal.
Borders were opened; freedom of personal movement was guaranteed; and product, safety and food regulations were harmonized, a process immortalized by the Eurosausage episode of the TV show "Yes Minister," in which the minister in question is told that under new European rules, the traditional British sausage no longer qualifies as a sausage and must be renamed the Emulsified High-Fat Offal Tube.
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It is all done in a beautiful booklet with color-illustrations which show the essential rightness of harmonizing a bowl of daliah lillies with a tub of coke.
Morris's gestures and signals codified principles an individual improviser might pursue intuitively — repeating a phrase, harmonizing a melody, creating variations of a rhythm — but that an orchestra could not perform en masse unless its members possessed psychic abilities.
"Visual art never begins with a poetic mood or idea," he once explained, "but with building one or several figures, with harmonizing a few colors or tones, or with calculating spatial relationships.
Mr. Simon's guests were doo-woppers: Little Anthony and the Imperials, harmonizing a cappella in "Two People in the World," and Dion DiMucci of Dion and the Belmonts, his voice still swaggering in "The Wanderer".
Its beautifully constructed first song, "Hey Chicken," sung by Mr. Tweedy, sounds like a reborn 45-r.p.m. single, doing nicely on rock radio in 1976: it's a series of riffs, a stodgy tempo, two lead-guitar lines harmonizing a third apart, a tambourine, and Mr. Tweedy's sneering, raspy voice instructing an ex-friend to get over himself.
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