英:[ˌtesɪˈtjʊərə]
美:[ˌtesɪˈtʊrə]
英:[ˌtesɪˈtjʊərə]
美:[ˌtesɪˈtʊrə]
tes·si·tu·ra
te sih tu r [or] tes si tu ra
复数:tessituras
Italian, literally, texture, from Latin textura
The first known use of tessitura was in 1875
1 Tessitura signifies the general compass of a particular part, which may be high, low or normal for a voice.
可用音域是指某一部分的常用音域,可以是高,低或正常。
2 As a performer, Allison has a strong stylistic command of her vibrato, demonstrates good pitch and bow control across her full tessitura, and can perform with great musicality.
3 Mozart pleased his singers by giving them glittering music that showcased their virtuosity and highlighted their tessituras.
4 Does faster music tend to have a wider tessitura?
5 That is, does music with a faster tempo—more beats, or footsteps, per second—tend to have a wider tessitura?
6 The fast-ascendant baritone Jarrett Ott, as Seward, mastered a demanding tessitura and vividly conveyed the character’s arrogance and agony.
7 Kathleen Kim’s soprano sparkled in Josephine’s high tessitura; bass-baritone Wayne Tigges was appropriately brutal as Sgt.
8 Maxim Mironov proves capable of handling the high tenor tessitura while suavely sashaying with his scarf.
9 In the premiere of this work, Cycles of My Being by composer Tyshawn Sorey and poet Terrance Hayes, Brownlee repurposed his remarkably solid middle-high tessitura to angst-ridden ends.