(1) (music
(2) (music) a pulsating effect in an instrumental or vocal tone produced by slight and rapid variations in pitch
(3) Vibration
(1) Consistent vibrato was invented by Fritz Kreisler well into the twentieth century.
(2) She scales back her vibrato and lightens her tone most appropriately for this repertoire.
(3) This is the flauto dolce indeed but never with that gawping vibrato that too many flautists, having seen the error of their ways and taken up the recorder, are apt to regale us with.
(4) The choir sings with refinement - and curiously, with not much vibrato - and the smallish orchestra is game and accomplished.
(5) I never knew that Baroque music could be an option for me because I had only heard recordings in which it was sung with little or no vibrato .
(6) Ms Ivu00d4u00f6u00a3u251cu00a1n's rapid vibrato and power is well suited to the operatic repertoire, a selection of which the duo performed in the second half.
(7) I can hear how he's just so full of himself and his perfect pitch and vibrato that he doesn't even notice what a dreadful and boring song it is.
(8) So I hooked up with a local violinist and asked him to play some of the music with strong vibrato, low to moderate vibrato, and zero vibrato .
(9) The standard vibrato of the Boehm flute does give life to its tone, but it might be interesting to be able to vary pitch, volume, and timbre independently and simultaneously.
(10) Their vibrato and the tone it produced, among other things, was just utterly Romantic in nature and would make any good Baroque scholar cringe.
(11) I went there and I started to sing with my faster vibrato , and I never re-sang the song.
(12) Byrne sings without the usual intense operatic vibrato , and he sounds more heartfelt than ever.
(13) Slow, sustained and played with vibrato , this music has a raw power which builds gradually to a G major climax.
(14) His tone is lean without any of the thick vibrato so common from modern violins but entirely inappropriate for Mozart's music.
(15) The Vu00d4u00f6u00a3u252cu00abghs generally used less vibrato and more portamento than quartets that ascended in the 1950s and 60s.
(16) The singers have good voices, singing clearly and accurately, using little vibrato in what has become the accepted style for Baroque vocal music.
(17) A clean, light sound without vibrato
(18) He's probably the only recorder virtuoso to use vibrato to signify irony.
(19) How did these women match their pitch, vibrato , and timbres with such precision?
(20) Her rapid vibrato , particularly above the stave, added a distinctive and not unpleasant color.
vibrato