While in the Romantic period audible shifts are often used ( portamento and glissando ) these are absent from Baroque playing.
42.
Trombone players must lightly tongue many slurs by tonguing " da "; otherwise, the result would be a glissando.
43.
The right thumb is used for percussive rhythmic " thumping " on the bass strings and glissando on the upper strings.
44.
Sometimes a pitcher will try one opening note, find it unsatisfactory, then execute a glissando to a neighboring pitch.
45.
It begins with two pairs of pizzicato chords separated by a glissando, an extended technique which was championed by Bart�k.
46.
Every so often, Sonic Boom reached over to a theremin, playing squiggles or slow siren glissandos or long stationary tones.
47.
Episodes of vocal wildness, microtonal and glissando playing and unearthly cluster sonorities give way to monumental chantlike progressions and voluptuous lyricism.
48.
Beginning with the famous opening clarinet glissando, which Ellington reassigned to baritone sax, every element takes on a new identity.
49.
By 1915, Carl Nielsen was demanding glissandos on timpani in his Fourth Symphony impossible on the old hand-tuned drums.
50.
The single also incorporates elements that were not included on the album track, such as an organ glissando at the beginning.