Best known for his operas in a career cut short by his early death
Georges Bizet
Percy Faith
"Theme from A Summer Place"
an instrument that uses reeds and air to create sound
accordion
The genre emerged alongside the invention of sound in the late 1920s thanks to the first full-length — and controversial — sound picture
The Jazz Singer (1927)
Rodarius Marcell Green
Rod Wave
was a Swedish organist, composer, and conductor
Elfrida Andrée
Jim Reeves
"He'll Have to Go"
thin strips of material that air passes over to vibrate, which in turn creates a sound
Reeds
Which is why a bulk of the earliest musicals were simple Broadway adaptations
Gold Diggers of Broadway (1929)
"I lost a Ferrari Las Vegas, Nevada."
Lil Baby and Drake
was a German composer, pianist, and conductor of the mid-Romantic period
Johannes Brahms
The Everly Brothers
"Cathy's Clown"
A baton, which is the French word for "stick," is used by conductors primarily to enlarge
conductor's baton
plotless song-and-dance productions
The Hollywood Revue of 1929
Oh-whoa, oh-whoa
Look, uh
Tour bus sliding in the rain, headed out of state
So much going through my brain, I can barely think
"Boyz don't cry"
was a New Zealand music and singing teacher, performer, composer, and entertainment promoter
Elizabeth Mary Palmer
Johnny Preston
"Running Bear"
may be categorized as idiophones, or instruments sounding by the vibration of resonant solid material
Bell
centers on a gambler’s journey to redemption after he’s shot and given a second chance
Cabin in the Sky (1943)
Double Jeopardy:
We love you ________
Tecca
was a Russian composer, a member of the group of composers known as The Five
Nikolai Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov
Mark Dinning
"Teen Angel"
Squidward plays this
Clarinet
In the 1950s, public interest in the decline of Old Hollywood inspired studios to produce some of cinema’s biggest classics like All About Eve (1950)
Singin’ in the Rain (1952)
"Fight The Feeling"
Rod Wave