The panel comprised award-winning singer Laura Mvula, Vix Vox from Fuzzbox, The Specials' Horace Panter and Phil Etheridge from The Twang. |
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Other popular bands from Birmingham include Duran Duran, Fine Young Cannibals, Felt, Broadcast, Ocean Colour Scene, The Streets, The Twang, Deluka and Dexys Midnight Runners. |
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The Halloween party will include hours of music in various American styles, including Rockabilly, Surf, Twang, Cowpunk, Country, Western, and more. |
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His speech was so heavy with the flat twang of the Danes that it was hard to understand. |
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She's from Texas, and the words roll off her tongue with a distinctive elastic twang, softened by the years in New York. |
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Despite his training from speech therapists, a slight twang escaped Cutler's lips on that final word. |
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She gestures to your bags, her American twang uncomfortably loud in the small area. |
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As they arrived in Latham, the familiar, edgy electronic Seinfeld music was momentarily replaced by a hillbilly twang. |
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The Japanese, Portuguese, French, and even the occasional twang of a North American accent suddenly sounded divine. |
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I always found her to be nasally and pitchy, but I'm not a big fan of the country twang to begin with. |
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It's music that you want to move to, with electric guitar riffs that twang and gyrate across the airwaves. |
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Just because you sing with the odd hiccup or twang a certain phrase doesn't mean you can say you're singing country music. |
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So, if you like your country-ish rock complete with slide guitars and a little twang, feel free to blast it out your car stereo this summer. |
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The difference this time is Indians are calling the shots, instead of just handing their sitars over to the Beatles to twang. |
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Wrapped in slick vocal layering and multi-tracked veneer, the disc is more upbeat than previous records and features an old-country twang. |
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He had that smug, always right, nasal sounding twang, of Ken's down to perfection. |
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She was a major attraction in Educating Archie and on stage in the character of Marlene, a Birmingham girl with an exaggerated Brummie twang. |
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The west coast of Scotland is renowned for having a soft spot for music with a country twang. |
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Then there is the Brummie twang of the landlord of the pub where Graham stays when recording the radio soap. |
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Frankly, what's the point in being super-rich if you can't just have a toot and a twang in the garden? |
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Arlan chuckled, but then stiffened as he heard the twang of a bowstring, and he ducked, jerking Cora down with him. |
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Unlike us buttoned-up New Orleanians, he spoke in a mellifluous twang, a product of Meridian, Mississippi. |
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Ness sounds as hushed, gravelly, and desperate as always, singing over that ragged guitar twang. |
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There was a faint twang, followed by a quiet whiz, as a crossbow bolt flew through the air and collided with a thump into the side of the vent. |
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Celil was suddenly thrust back into reality from her daydream by the bellow of a war-horn, screeches and roars, and the twang of bowstrings. |
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Her alternation between a slight twang and subtle gristle leans a bit toward classic country. |
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He talks in a soft Glasgow accent that sometimes seems to be teetering on the brink of a mid-Atlantic twang. |
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His singing and dancing are comparatively weak, and he speaks all of his lines with an undisguised Australian twang. |
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It is replaced by the soft rustle of saris, the smells of incense and saffron, and the Eastern twang of sitars. |
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As he exhaled, Erik let his arrow fly with a sharp twang of the string, the sound echoed thirty times over as the rest of the cadets fired. |
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He threw himself onto the ground as the meadow was filled with the twang of many bowstrings. |
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Suddenly the twang of a bowstring rang out and the cloak fell to the floor. |
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Thinking of a satisfying bass guitar sound, a twang which makes the room vibrate but doesn't go through the ears at all. |
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As they paddle, they hear the twang of bowstrings and arrows begin to fall around them. |
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The harshness of the Belfast twang has dissipated little during an illustrious football career away from his homeland. |
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So what's happening to the music once defined by the twang and heartache of Hank Williams, Johnny Cash, and Patsy Cline? |
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We paddled on in tense silence, waiting for more gunfire or perhaps the twang of a banjo, but they were not interested in us. |
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The accents may be English, albeit with a twang, but the influences are Australian. |
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Featuring the talents of Cynthia Frazzini and Craig Aspen, The Believers' sound blends Americana rock with folk-country and a hillbilly twang. |
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He's sent through by Totti and, with only Perez to beat, allows the ball to twang off not one but two of his shins, allowing the keeper to clear for a corner. |
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A ringing twang interrupted the scene as a large piece of shrapnel ricocheted off a 500-pounder in the bomb bay, causing me to momentarily slam the door shut. |
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The twang of a guitar string resounded periodically, but never a song. |
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I heard the twang of guitar strings, and a little melody ensued. |
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Then, there was the soft twang of the string being let go, and she rolled over into her horse's hind legs, once again barely being missed by an arrow. |
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Suddenly she heard, amidst all the noise, the twang of a bow. |
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Vibes, synths and heavily reverbed flutes slide through the mix, anchored by Lee's guitar and voice, and electric guitars twang along on the margins. |
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He always accentuated his northern twang when he was up from university. |
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Not everyone in Ohio speaks with the midwestern nasal twang. |
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The twang we hear as emblematic of white country music is actually the direct descendant of black folk music banjo. |
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Go into any bar in the county and before long the chances are you'll come across a member of the bar staff with that distinctive Antipodean twang. |
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He sighted his target, and released the string with a twang. |
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Jeremy followed, dropping onto the elevator as Andy sat down to slide his legs down through the open hatch, and the groaning sound became a sharp twang. |
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With the gentle twang of the lutes, the lively melody started. |
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He's got a southern twang to his voice that disarms his listeners. |
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There is a laconic drawl, an ever so slight nasal twang to his voice. |
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They fear their distinct twang, nonstandard grammar, and obscure idioms will cause potential employers to conclude they are incapable of holding jobs. |
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The distinctive twang that has been heard in Bolton for centuries is in danger of being swallowed up by a general Northern accent, language experts claims. |
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Toss in a taste of backwoods twang and that's some fine vittles. |
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I thought it might have been that he was 2nd generation Jamaican, but listening closely the Brummie twang was overpowering any residual patois from his parents. |
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It ends perfectly, with a satisfyingly decisive, koto-like twang. |
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Their internationalism spoke the flat accents of the Midwest, or the twang of the border and Southern states. |
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The dodgy clothes, even dodgier hairdos, grating transatlantic twang and now she's telling her fans to go do drugs. |
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When the BBC broadcast a documentary series on Scottish trawlermen they subtitled their conversation even though their Aberdeenshire twang was perfectly decipherable. |
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One of the UK's leading Emcees, BLAK TWANG aka Tony Rotton will entertain the crowds and A DJ set from Massive Attack's legendary Daddy G is not to be missed. |
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Also, Wendy Rule's album Deity features a song called Think of the Day which has that great guitar twang and laidback blues sound making it very Twin Peaksy indeed. |
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The Black Roses sounds like a Mystery Movie theme, Hollywood boasts a Spectoresque wall of sound and doo-wop chorus, while Like A Full Moon is all reverb guitar twang. |
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