Results 171 to 180 of about 19,673 (218)
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LyricAlly

Proceedings of the 12th annual ACM international conference on Multimedia, 2004
We present a prototype that automatically aligns acoustic musical signals with their corresponding textual lyrics, in a manner similar to manually-aligned karaoke. We tackle this problem using a multimodal approach, where the appropriate pairing of audio and text processing helps create a more accurate system.
Ye Wang   +4 more
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Jan Zwicky: Lyric Philosophy Lyric

2019
Canadian Literature, No.
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Lyrics

2008
Abstract The lyrics and shorter poems are in many ways the glory of late medieval English literature. This is a view that will seem strange to those fresh from reading some older studies: indeed, of all the genres in English literature in this period, the lyric has perhaps suffered most from once fashionable conventional patterns of ...
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Lyric

2016
The first chapter addresses T. S. Eliot’s struggle with history as this struggle unfolds between 1910 and 1920, between the composition of “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” and the publication of “Gerontion.” Challenging readings of Eliot’s project as, from its inception, conciliatory—the terminus of a certain narrative of literary modernism, the ...
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Lyrics

2014
Lyrics are the sung text of a popular music or music theater song performed by a singer or singers that provide the cognitive meaning to a song. The history of lyrics writing demonstrates different approaches that have been taken to the composition of lyrics and their relationship with the song.
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Lyric

2005
Abstract To see where the word ‘lyric’ comes from, look up on a clear summer’s night at Lyra, the lovely constellation that seemed to the ancient Greeks to resemble a lyre, or harp. For them a lyric was a poem sung to the lyre or another instrument.
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Lyric

Nineteenth-century conceptions of lyric remain highly influential within literary scholarship. All the same, this term—which has long resisted precise definition—remained elusive for the Victorians. “Lyric” comes from the Greek for “lyre”; some Victorian theorists therefore believed that a lyric should be singable, or that its language should possess ...
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