The song “Rock n Roll High School” was written for the 1979 musical comedy film of the same name and is about the Ramones’ number one fan trying to get her song played by them. True, or false... the song starts with a tom-tom groove on the drums, which never returns through the rest of the song.
Answer: FALSE
Explanation: The statement is partially true, the song “Rock n Roll High School” was written for the 1979 musical comedy film of the same name (and re-recorded in 1980 for the Ramone's album "End of the Century), but the song is not about Ramones’ number one fan trying to get her song played by them (that is what the film is about), actually is about not caring about school and having fun somewhere else.
Also the tom-tom groove on the drums is present during all the song.
A dancer reaches from her shoulder out to the distal ends of her arm and traces a huge circle with her fingertips far away from her torso. She then repeats the same circle traced with her fingertips, but at the halfway mark she stops and dabs the elbow of her other arm sporadically in the air for a few seconds, before continuing to trace the circle. Of the list of Compositional Devices, the second action is an example of what?
she use perment maker and it will not come off
The author of the text points out that some writers make a distinction between ________________________, in which parts of the sculpture are simply place on or near each other, and __________________________, in which the parts are actually joined together through welding, nailing, or a similar procedure.
Answer:
assembling / constructing
Explanation:
When you assemble things you place pieces on or near each other on a sculpture. On the other hand, constructing involves joining through welding and nailing.
“Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds:” A) was inspired by a Picasso-like drawing of Lennon’s four-year old son Julian B) revolves around repeated-note figures over a partially chromatic descending bass line C) contains an oblique reference to the Vietnam War D) was influenced by J. R. R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings.
Answer:
A) was inspired by a Picasso-like drawing but it was drawn BY Lennon's son, Julien it was not a drawing OF him.
Explanation:
John Lennon said that his inspiration for the song came when his three-year-old son Julian showed him a nursery school drawing that he called "Lucy – in the Sky with Diamonds", depicting his classmate Lucy O'Donnell.