Similar words: confucianism, banister, humanist, egalitarianism, totalitarianism, Christianity, communist manifesto, piano. Meaning: ['pɪænɪst /'pɪə-] n. a person who plays the piano.
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(61) A pianist plays twice a week in the small, genteel bar and the large lounge.
(62) He is a pianist of extraordinary capability, with a virtuoso technique that is second to none.
(63) Barron started on piano at twelve, studying with a sister of pianist Ray Bryant.
(64) She became an accomplished pianist and several of her pictures were exhibited at the Royal Academy.
(65) I wanted to talk to the famous pianist before his concert.
(66) The bar opens on to a terrace and, during the high season, music is provided by a pianist or trio.
(67) Featured soloists include 18-year-old violinist Tigran Vardanian and 16-year-old pianist Andrew von Oeyen.
(68) But Torme, the songwriter, arranger, drummer and pianist, always sings at a superior level in a jazz context.
(69) The pianist threw in chords and runs I never heard at the Baptist church.
(70) There is an elegant lounge and a pianist entertains guests in the piano bar several times a week.sentence dictionary
(71) Most of these exhibitions, which pit pianist against pianist as if they were gladiators, came into existence after 1958.
(72) In 1995, the state of BadenWuerttemberg blocked a performance by jazz pianist Chick Corea because he is a member.
(73) Opening will be a top roster of local talent, along with Chicago-based pianist / vocalist Judy Roberts.
(74) He appeared at the Montreux festival in 1978, and at last began to get some international recognition as a pianist.
(75) As a pianist and vocalist, he organized a band backed by a female vocal group, the Rhythm Debs.
(76) A pianist neither acquires nor executes the behavior of playing a scale smoothly because of a prior intention of doing so.
(77) He remembers seeing blind pianist George Shearing perform in Bisbee, of all places.
(78) Built in 1904, there is an intimate, galleried restaurant and elegant lounges where a pianist plays each evening.
(79) By his early teens he was an accomplished pianist and guitarist.
(80) At Macy's Plaza, a pianist gracefully serenades shoppers and a fountain offers a soothing respite from the pounding sidewalks outside.
(81) Leiser discovered, however, that because the embassy had an inferior instrument, the pianist practiced at the local conservatory.
(82) The programme reveals that the actor was a notable pianist and once considered becoming a concert pianist.
(83) Richie later made a name for himself as the pianist in the Clifford BrownMax Roach Quintet in 1954.
(84) The young concert pianist had spent fewer hours reaching concert standard than he had spent achieving a mediocre amateur level.
(85) Even a pianist can not play a piece the same way twice.
(86) So he took up the violin as well, and now he gives concerts on both instruments with pianist Mari Tomizuka.
(87) Styx A fun pub with entertainment ranging from disco and live music, to pianist and cabaret.
(88) Her sister Martine, who was a concert pianist, had a coming-out party at the Plaza.
(89) This at last confirmed his qualities as a pianist whose future deserves to be closely watched.
(90) The man was a visiting Texan who was in Britain as manager of a fellow countryman, a concert pianist.
More similar words: confucianism, banister, humanist, egalitarianism, totalitarianism, Christianity, communist manifesto, piano, utopian, dystopian, utopian socialism, banish, vanish, Spanish, organise, humanism, organism, mechanism, vanishing, disorganise, republicanism, organisation, microorganism, spanish armada, animist, ministry, feminist, sinister, hedonist, minister.