Choral in a sentence as a noun

Ok, on that note, I like Bach choral music because I can't understand any of what is being said. It is in many ways ethereal.

Judging solely from my choral background, of course conductors are needed. We're trained from day one to follow maestro's direction, but to listen to our neighbors and blend in.

I'm happier when I have fewer, quieter things in front of me, not a constellation of shiny, floating gurgling choral singers.

Some of the homophone pairs the author used seem pretty dubious to me: ant/aunt, choral/coral, air/err, awed/odd, veldt/felt. This is partly British versus American English, but not wholly.

In music at least you can usually hire additional soloists as needed and let the choral ensemble handle the ensemble parts.

By joining the university choral society, persistence, and a fair bit of luck. You'll probably do it differently.

I wonder if a device such as the SpeechEasy which replicates the choral effect would have any impact on his condition, it does for stuttering.

I could equally look at the time of the enlightenment and say "if people weren't forced to give their money to the Catholic church, think of all the lovely buildings and choral music we'd be denied. Therefore - people should be forced to give money to the church!"

Choral in a sentence as an adjective

I’m not religious but I am spiritual enough to enjoy chapel, and choral music is a free gig if you’re into that sound. People are glad to meet you in church: it’s the easiest way of signalling you take the community seriously.

Intonation problems drive conductors insane, and the reality is that orchestral and choral pitches tend to drift slightly towards consonance and away from the nominal ET ratios. Of course, with a computer you can do what you like.

And in that vein, if you don't have to worry about the money, you can afford to say "no, I would rather go see my daughter's choral concert than work". Obviously I would keep myself busy, but it would be under an arrangement where I could prioritize my family.

This might include choral and solo performance experience. I suspect they have a combination of experience, learned 'coachability', and a greater than average awareness of how to produce the correct sounds.

Finding an Elizabeth Fraser and paying them to practice for 40 hours a week under the supervision of a professional choral voice instructor while you coach the band on composition in a recording studio is not. Why invest in a product nobody will pay for?

Given that my startup is heading towards an area with a historically high rate of chargebacks and I was facing the nightmare of fraud detection, this particular article is like a nugget of solid gold that has descended from the clouds with a heavenly host providing choral music. Thankyou.

The closest he ever gets to generic is Fountain of Love, which has a surprising guitar line, a very complex choral arrangement, and quotes from Stravinsky's Rite of Spring at the end. I could give you more songs from any of these albums, or show you other albums of his, and unless I told you you would be unable to guess it was Zappa.

Many choral conductors prefer the third in a chord slightly raised, especially in sustained chords or cadences, to avoid any suggestion of 'flatting' the chord, a particular nemesis of choirs. How much of the apparent preference for sharpened intervals is due to constant exposure to pianos with stretched turning is difficult to determine."

Choral definitions

noun

a stately Protestant (especially Lutheran) hymn tune

See also: chorale

adjective

related to or written for or performed by a chorus or choir; "choral composition"; "choral ensemble"