「Minstrel」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Minstrel

1語右で並び替え

該当件数:164件

  • he published in 1825 Waterloo, or the British Minstrel, a poem.
  • of other songs, they were included in the top minstrel acts around the country in 1894.
  • uitors have failed to secure her release, the minstrel Alpino is successful and she is restored to h
  • tramp, the carefree enjoyer, the admirer, the minstrel, and the ambassadeur of all things living, th
  • He had a small part as a strolling minstrel and sang several of his own songs.
  • for entertainment hosting touring vaudeville, minstrel and dramatic companies.
  • or October 10, 1705), Vienna) was an Austrian minstrel, bagpiper, and improvisatory poet most famous
  • The minstrel band consisted of a banjo, a concertina, a ha
  • tances in four major journeys with his Muslim Minstrel, Bhai Mardana.
  • r to the sentiments evoked by the more famous Minstrel Boy by Thomas Moore) to remind us of the infl
  • Minstrel Boy is a compilation album from Scottish sing
  • "The Minstrel Boy" - 1:38
  • n's 1965 Pye Records recordings and titled it Minstrel Boy.
  • stralian Wild Notes from the Lyre of a Native Minstrel by Charles Tompson junior, which appeared in
  • The Modern Scottish Minstrel, by Charles Rogers, LL.D. F.S.A. Scot.
  • The minstrel Carlo Broschi has hidden his sister Casilda i
  • forced to travel further from the established minstrel circuits in order to survive.
  • ience, but from the perspectives of two stock minstrel clowns, who perform this history as a histori
  • in", is an American song written by blackface minstrel composer Dan Emmett.
  • where in the twelfth century, and the Flemish minstrel Diederic van Assenede completed his version o
  • & 20th Centuries: preragtime, blues, folk and minstrel, early ragtime, dixieland, ragtime-stride, bl
  • The minstrel Elis presents Els with an ornament he has fou
  • Brower took the role of one of the minstrel endmen and played the bones.
  • l seasons until 1865 when he played his first minstrel engagement with the Morris Brothers in Boston
  • Alton is also president of Minstrel Enterprises LLC., a music production company
  • wn as "Charley" White, was an early blackface minstrel entertainer.
  • glass to the main circuit of the most favored minstrel entertainers [1].
  • guitar), a circus barker, a ventriloquist, a minstrel, etc., had met and married his mother, Fannie
  • The note shapes used in Aikin's Christian Minstrel eventually became the prevailing standard in
  • e King of Bokhara, but falls in love with the minstrel Feramors, who turns out to be the King in dis
  • A minstrel, for percussion.
  • 25 - 25 January 2009) was a widely-know blind minstrel from Lagos, Nigeria.
  • is mainly dated from the 15th century, with a minstrel gallery from 1623, a peal of six bells, and a
  • The building has a minstrel gallery from 1623, a peal of six bells, and a
  • olved, he started travelling as a member of a minstrel group and in 1883 he arrived to Los Angeles.
  • as Gloddaeth Hall centred on the magnificent Minstrel Hall dating from the Tudor period right up to
  • ed unauthorized sheet music for the blackface minstrel hit, "Dixie".
  • was 16 September 1361, when he was paid as a minstrel in the service of Gaston Phoebus.
  • ed to Roger James Cooke, Meanwhile... (1972), Minstrel in Flight (1973), and Alright (1976).
  • ver, attached himself to Sir Hugo as a Breton minstrel, in order that he might avenge the death of G
  • Minstrel in the Gallery
  • Minstrel in the Gallery (1975)
  • He's a minstrel in the old English sense.
  • He was a minstrel in Ye Olden Days (as the source says) - but s
  • 1492), also known as Harry, Hary or Henry the Minstrel, is renowned as the author of The Actes and D
  • The princess is shocked to discover the minstrel is really King Thrushbeard.
  • led to Coltman's three solo LPs issued on the Minstrel label.
  • ...And a Minstrel Left the Mourning Valley - 2:02
  • His first Capitol release, "Travelin' Minstrel Man", peaked at number 33 on Hot Country Song
  • The white-dominated minstrel market proved hostile to a black owner, and H
  • Massachusetts, and son of the goodly old-time minstrel, Milt G. Barlow (1843-1904), he made his stag
  • ructure and high-brow style became popular in minstrel music.
  • an and a man considered the greatest American minstrel of his day, at a time when minstrel shows wer
  • ducer of the supposedly Richest and Costliest Minstrel Organization in Existence: West's Big Minstre
  • In the later lived the adventurer and minstrel Oswald von Wolkenstein.
  • t the lyrics may have belonged to a wandering minstrel; other poems included on same page in the man
  • February 15, 1902), known as the "Progressive Minstrel", emulated the British minstrel owner Sam Hag
  • uo Jay and Abby Michaels - The Harper and The Minstrel performed the song as an acoustic ballad on t
  • allace King was an African American blackface minstrel performer from the 19th century.
  • ng also satirizes the low pay earned by early minstrel performers: "Ole Bull come to town one day [a
  • "Play Minstrel Play" by Renaissance band Blackmore's Night,
  • in, the large group in the centre include the Minstrel Rock, Carn-dhu, Maen Voes (the Voices) and th
  • ly Gould, a vaudeville comedian known for his minstrel roles.
  • Music and dance were the heart of the minstrel show and a large reason for its popularity.
  • "The Scottsboro Boys" tells its story as a minstrel show - a popular entertainment from the 19th
  • "Doing a minstrel show today is such a racially-charged thing t
  • He toured with revues such as the Rabbit Foot Minstrel Show while still in his teens, and soon after
  • -In, Hee Haw, which borrowed heavily from the minstrel show tradition.
  • is an American song written for the blackface minstrel show stage in 1843.
  • s as a metaphor for the replacement of rural, minstrel show stereotypes of blacks for modern, urban
  • in other regions such as the Florida Blossoms minstrel show and the Kingston Nighthawks, a territory
  • terpiece of the original cover art featured a Minstrel show caricature of a Black man in formal atti
  • The song's lyrics follow the minstrel show scenario of the freed slave longing to r
  • cing the stage version of The Black and White Minstrel Show and being the former agent of Lenny Henr
  • stage allowed the popular The Black and White Minstrel Show to perform there many times when it was
  • A minstrel show song set in the style of a spiritual, th
  • found versions of "Miss Lucy Long" in 34% of minstrel show programs he examined from the 1843-52 pe
  • I saw some ragtag minstrel show in blackface at the carnivals when I was
  • the group, however, Cooper was not a typical minstrel show performer.
  • 6 - The Virginia Minstrels perform the first minstrel show (Bowery Amphitheatre, New York City).
  • ere instrumental in the solidification of the minstrel show into a fixed three-act form.
  • Winans's research found it in 19% of minstrel show programs for the 1843-7 period.
  • The minstrel show continued to be performed on stage until
  • 1967: The Minstrel Show or Civil Rights in a Cracker Barrel
  • Dawson is married to former Black and White Minstrel Show soloist John Boulter.
  • The song was fairly popular in the minstrel show's first few years.
  • In 1896 at age 18, Gilpin joined a minstrel show, leaving Richmond and beginning a life o
  • tuted the first act of the standardized 3-act minstrel show, with the interlocutor in the middle and
  • He began his career in a minstrel show, but by 1878 was playing at the Chestnut
  • including performances in the Black and White Minstrel Show, the Royal Variety Performance and the B
  • ecause, although his speech pattern was early Minstrel Show, he himself derived from another literar
  • Around 1908 he toured with Guy Brother's Minstrel Show, and helped form a vaudeville act "Westo
  • dy,” “Lonesome Robin,” “Before They Close the Minstrel Show,” and the widely praised Christmas song
  • ritish blackface group on The Black and White Minstrel Show.
  • ppearance on stage at a Kiwanis International minstrel show.
  • to invent the entertainment form known as the minstrel show.
  • American dwarf who performed in the blackface minstrel show.
  • ving devised the long-running Black and White Minstrel Show.
  • roup of blackface performers to put on a full minstrel show.
  • After RADA Ruth worked in The Black and White Minstrel Show.
  • In 1920, he was working with the Green River Minstrel Show.
  • of the song are typical of those of the early minstrel show.
  • interlocutor is the master of ceremonies of a minstrel show.
  • V series and Henry joined The Black and White Minstrel Show.
  • 0s he became a regular on the Black and White Minstrel Show.
  • hip hop group Little Brother's 2005 album The Minstrel Show.
  • lav's performance "a coon act on a modern-day minstrel show."
  • Illusion Minstrel Show: "Madame Zuzu"
  • Illusion Minstrel Show: "Takin' No Chances"
  • Illusion Minstrel Show: "Miss Ideal Man"
  • s, Louisiana, he became a blackface singer in minstrel shows before starting his recording career ar
  • He played in circuses and minstrel shows and backing such blues singers as Ma Ra
  • He continued to perform in minstrel shows well into his fifties, long after they
  • erally acknowledged that he was performing in minstrel shows by his early twenties.
  • nd acting professionally with traveling Negro minstrel shows in his childhood.
  • He often produced and played minstrel shows with George Primrose, first with a mins
  • ng and dancing in the stereotypical manner of minstrel shows of the era, he performed as a ventriloq
  • nian Orthodox Christmas tradition of Irozii - minstrel shows centered around the figure of Herod the
  • inued for a series of entr'actes and complete minstrel shows in Cork, Belfast, then Glasgow by the e
  • nd in his teens in addition to traveling with minstrel shows and traveling circuses.
  • She left home to tour with traveling minstrel shows, often appearing in blackface into the
  • inment "such as magic acts, singing, dancing, minstrel shows," as well as sexual services.
  • aturing Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith, and other minstrel shows.
  • he was six, and in 1906 started working with minstrel shows.
  • ve dramatic performances, civic lectures, and minstrel shows.
  • ove to Detroit, Davis had worked in traveling minstrel shows.
  • ic and performed as a teenager with traveling minstrel shows.
  • b Farrell was a New York City-based blackface minstrel singer, best known for introducing the song "
  • t is awakened to his heritage by a mysterious minstrel singing at an entertainment.
  • $12.50 per week performing various songs and minstrel skits [12].
  • The Boatman's Dance is a minstrel song credited to Dan Emmett in 1843 and arran
  • video games Radiata Stories, Romancing SaGa: Minstrel Song and the main character in an upcoming ve
  • and Theft, Dylan claimed that the song "is a minstrel song through and through.
  • Romancing SaGa: Minstrel Song - Producer and director
  • east coast several versions were published as minstrel songs with slightly different lyrics and diff
  • is hoped that some of the more untraditional ' Minstrel songs that were incorporated in favour of tra
  • From the canon of Minstrel songs within the current practice it can be s
  • y raced, as a two-year-old Risen Star won the Minstrel Stakes at Louisiana Downs that set the stage
  • The Palace of Minstrel sung and danced by a minstrel chorus
  • It is clearly a minstrel tale, praising giving gifts to minstrels, and
  • avy, and in May 1812 sailed for Sydney in the Minstrel to take up his new duties.
  • rived in Adelaide in July 1883 with Heywood's Minstrel Troupe and decided to settle in the city.
  • d produced Tuxedo for George Thatcher and his minstrel troupe known as Thatcher's Minstrels.
  • 5 he organized Ordway's Aeolians, a blackface minstrel troupe which performed at Ordway Hall in Bost
  • In 1864, Leon formed a minstrel troupe with Edwin Kelly.
  • ven Europe as leader of Billy Kersand and his Minstrel Troupe, most of his musical career was spend
  • r Master Juba, who apparently toured with his minstrel troupe.
  • signify "Colored" when used in the title of a minstrel troupe.
  • He continued to purchase minstrel troupes throughout the 1870s and 80s and to a
  • n, manager, performer, and owner of blackface minstrel troupes composed of African American performe
  • rican owner and business manager of blackface minstrel troupes composed of African American performe
  • career, he worked with most successful black minstrel troupes as manager, owner or both.
  • s and so favoured the earlier traditional and minstrel tunes.
  • J.E. Boswell also published a minstrel version ("Wait For The Wagon: A New Ethiopian
  • Both the minstrel version and the Copland arrangement are widel
  • st known poems feature in The Modern Scottish Minstrel, Volume V. by Charles Rogers (1857) and three
  • William Newton (1750-1830), the Peak Minstrel was born near Abney, in the parish of Eyam, D
  • A cultivar known as Kennedia nigricans ' Minstrel' was registered with the Australian Cultivar
  • Dressed in finery is the minstrel, who smiles and asks why she is crying on her
  • According to the stories, he was a wandering minstrel who became a member of Robin's band of outlaw
  • patai, a literary device by which a bard or a minstrel who has received bountiful gifts from some we
  • y with an agenda) is trying to equate being a minstrel with racial stereotypes, but a quick look at
  • His talents as a minstrel won the favor of King Philip Augustus, and fo
  • iful courtesan, Silvia, and a young wandering minstrel, Zanetto.