Ode (disambiguation)

Last updated

An ode is a form of stately and elaborate lyrical verse.

Contents

Ode may also refer to:

Arts

Music

Other arts

Acronyms

Other

See also

Related Research Articles

Mercury most often refers to:

Orange most often refers to:

Orion may refer to:

Axis may refer to:

Apollo is a Greek and Roman god of music, healing, light, prophecy and enlightenment.

ODE may refer to:

Spark commonly refers to:

Gold is a chemical element with symbol Au and atomic number 79.

Orpheus was a legendary figure in Greek mythology, chief among poets and musicians.

Babel is a name used in the Hebrew Bible for the city of Babylon and may refer to:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">LĂ©onide Massine</span> Russian choreographer and ballet dancer

Leonid Fyodorovich Myasin, better known in the West by the French transliteration as Léonide Massine, was a Russian choreographer and ballet dancer. Massine created the world's first symphonic ballet, Les Présages, and many others in the same vein. Besides his "symphonic ballets," Massine choreographed many other popular works during his long career, some of which were serious and dramatic, and others lighthearted and romantic. He created some of his most famous roles in his own comic works, among them the Can-Can Dancer in La Boutique fantasque (1919), the Hussar in Le Beau Danube (1924), and, perhaps best known of all, the Peruvian in Gaîté Parisienne (1938). Today his oeuvre is represented by his son Theodor Massine.

Prelude may refer to:

The common nightingale is a songbird found in Eurasia.

An axiom is a proposition in mathematics and epistemology that is taken to be self-evident or is chosen as a starting point of a theory.

To ignite is the first step of firelighting.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nicolas Nabokov</span> Russian-American composer

Nicolas Nabokov was a Russian-born composer, writer, and cultural figure. He became a U.S. citizen in 1939.

Gaîté Parisienne is a 1938 ballet choreographed by Léonide Massine (1896-1979) to music by Jacques Offenbach (1819-1880) arranged and orchestrated many decades later by Manuel Rosenthal (1904-2003) in collaboration with Jacques Brindejonc-Offenbach, the composer's nephew. With a libretto and décor by Comte Étienne de Beaumont and costumes executed by Barbara Karinska, it was first presented by the Ballet Russe de Monte-Carlo at the Théâtre de Monte Carlo on 5 April 1938.

Ode: Elegiacal Chant in Three Parts is an orchestral work from 1943 composed by Igor Stravinsky. Prior to its completion, the score's working title had been Triads.

<i>Le chant du rossignol</i>

Le chant du rossignol is a symphonic poem written by Igor Stravinsky in 1917. The score is adapted from his earlier work, Le rossignol, an opera from 1914. The opera, based on Hans Christian Andersen's 1843 tale "The Nightingale", is set in three acts, told from the point of view of a Chinese fisherman. In the orchestral version, Stravinsky mostly uses music from acts two and three.

A midnight sun occurs when the sun is visible at midnight, local time.