excerpt from 'Music and Friends: Or, Pleasant Recollections of a Dilettante' pp. 691-692 (60 words)

excerpt from 'Music and Friends: Or, Pleasant Recollections of a Dilettante' pp. 691-692 (60 words)

part of

Music and Friends: Or, Pleasant Recollections of a Dilettante

original language

urn:iso:std:iso:639:ed-3:eng

in pages

691-692

type

text excerpt

encoded value

As an instance of... want of union, I heard a quartetto played in the Philharmonic, in which Mr. Lindley's bass stood alone — apart, as it were, from the other instruments. His tones would not amalgamate with those of Blagrove, Dando, and Tolbeque, but these gentlemen, when joined to Lucas, on the violoncello, unfold with apparent ease these extraordinary ideas.

appears in search results as

excerpt from 'Music and Friends: Or, Pleasant Recollections of a Dilettante' pp. 691-692 (60 words)

1435419511563:

reported in source

1435419511563

documented in
Page data computed in 331 ms with 1,740,912 bytes allocated and 35 SPARQL queries executed.