xylophone

ksilofon
definition
noun
It is a simple ballad with a choirboy singing a melody over a xylophone and soft string orchestral backing.
a musical instrument played by striking a row of wooden bars of graduated length with one or more small wooden or plastic mallets.
translation of 'xylophone'
noun
ksilofon
example
Here the group combines trombone, a simplistic guitar line, and what sounds like either a marimba or a 'xylophone' .
On Monoke, Chantler was using electronic devices to treat piano, guitar, 'xylophone' and local Japanese instruments and arranging his sounds into complex structures.
It is a simple ballad with a choirboy singing a melody over a 'xylophone' and soft string orchestral backing.
Percussion is composed of sleigh bells, tambourine, 'xylophone' and kettle drums.
Although I guessed that they didn't have their usual large scale entourage, the band was fleshed out nicely with an electric cello, violin, 'xylophone' , bass, drums, guitars and various vintage synths.
Jim, a pupil of Smithy Bridge School, is not only a highly accomplished drummer owning his own drum kit, but also plays the 'xylophone' , timpani, piano and accordion.
She played the tambourine, the 'xylophone' , and the harmonica, all to our swooning hearts' delight.
Dwarfed by a large screen on which there are projections of singing puppets and mind-numbing flash visuals, Manitoba bashes away on dual drum kits, keyboards, 'xylophones' , melodicas and stringless guitars.
Everybody who knows anything about xylophone knows you are not only the greatest living 'xylophonist' , but also the greatest xylophonist who has ever lived.
According to our research, the instrument was probably manned by a Paul Thardo, who was the 'xylophonist' with the Harley Sadler troupe.
Drums are a common instrument, as are wooden 'xylophones' ; bow harps; zithers; and the sanza, a small thumb piano fashioned from bamboo.
They used one of his numbers to open last year called ‘Blue Midnight’ and featured their excellent 'xylophonist' as soloist before rounding things off with ‘Shine As the Light’
During the funeral ritual, every phrase the 'xylophonist' plays has literal meaning in the Dagara language.
As a preamble to the actual event, the high school band performed some weird xylophone compositions, which featured a bunch of kids playing cymbals and drums… the 'xylophonists' were great!
The cozy empathy of those loopy, repetitive guitars and 'xylophones' envelops you, wraps you in tenderness, gives you the quiet strength to face all the hoarse pain of the world again.
The serious 'xylophonist' will find this work to be challenging, rewarding and a crowd pleaser.
In the studio control room, Composer Gillis watched the struggling 'xylophonist' , whispered to a companion: ‘Poor guy.’
I think the 'xylophonist' was Zombie Chernenko.
In a real players' tour-de-force, this multi-faceted and instrumental band allows all of its members - from guitarist to 'xylophonists' - to contribute to the genial groove going on.
The version of Dropshadow's ‘Disease Fototienda’ is suffused with 'xylophonic' scales, bent mandolins, military snares and sparkling orchestral pop, and bound with Velcro.
The album opens with shimmering, aquatic 'xylophones' before the drums crash in with a fractured march, and a woozy bass spills like a cloud of ink all over everything.
Left behind are dry nipping ambient winds and sleepy-eyed guitars like so many tattered articles of clothing and in their place emerge woolly layers of banjo, children's 'xylophones' , trumpets and home-recorded toy pianos.
First the 'xylophonic' tinkering, then the thunderous drums, instantly knock you out.
Gordon Stout affirms that, ‘Sammy Herman is one of the greatest 'xylophonists' in our history.’
Percussion plays a major role, particularly what Grainger called ‘tuneful percussion,’ chimes, glockenspiels, tuned gongs, celestas, 'xylophones' , and so on.
From 1917 to 1919 he was a drummer and 'xylophonist' with Earl Fuller's Rector Novelty Orchestra and recorded and performed on Broadway.
One of the most widely known of the 'xylophonists' in the 1920's was George Hamilton Green.
They were to be accompanied by two grand pianos played by musicians, as well as three 'xylophones' , four bass drums, a gong, three aeroplane propellers, seven electric bells and a siren.
The range of music is staggering: whistling soloists, 'xylophonists' playing polkas, John Philip Sousa leading his band through famous marches.
A thick gush of guitar and 'xylophonic' pluck, the vocals are pushed up front for the first time.
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