Sentence examples for joyous work from inspiring English sources

Exact(6)

Morris, the first dance luminary to direct the event, collaborated with the jazz trio the Bad Plus on his joyous work for 15 dancers.

Still, it was somehow just right to hear this joyous work from Schubert's late teens after the adventures with Prokofiev and, especially, Constant.

He produced some joyous work in recent years for Barrie Rutter's Northern Broadsides company in Halifax, and Peter Maxwell Davies's St Magnus festival in Orkney, a place he loved as deeply as anywhere in Britain.

As a chronicle of rebirth, The Truce is an often joyous work that gives the impression, said Levi, of a "world in Technicolor"; the monochrome of If This Is a Man, his earlier account of Auschwitz, has none of the sequel's radiance.

It is hard to believe that there are any old masters left waiting to be rediscovered, but so it seems with the Italian artist Federico Barocci, a painter whose radiant, radical and amazingly joyous work is having its first full-scale British show at the National Gallery in London.

It is the most joyous work here, yet it had me closer to tears than any other song.

Similar(52)

Schumann attempted suicide, throwing himself into the Rhine (the inspiration for one of his most joyous works, the Rhenish symphony – cruel irony).

"To believe this story," he wrote, "you must believe that the human race can be one joyous family, working together, laughing together, achieving the impossible…" That story became a reality two years later.

Part of the program consists of a world premiere composed by Mick Barr, a guitarist known for his blistering speed and agility in avant-garde metal bands like Orthrelm and Krallice; the rest is devoted to bright, joyous chamber works by William Brittelle as heard on "Loving the Chambered Nautilus," ACME's latest release on New Amsterdam Records.

Brasher expounded his dream in The Observer: 'You must believe that the human race can be one joyous family, working together, laughing together, achieving the impossible.' It is now one of Britain's most popular sporting events, attracting 25,000 runners, a TV audience of millions and raises £60 million a year for charities.

After taking part in the 1979 New York Marathon, Chrisopher Brasher, a former sports editor for the paper, wrote 'To believe this story you must believe that the human race can be one joyous family, working together, laughing together, achieving the impossible... the greatest folk festival the world has seen.' Brasher convinced himself that London could do what New York had done.

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