|
operatic voice
|
0.79 |
|
A great operatic voice is a glory. |
|
operatic aria
|
0.72 |
|
Strains of an operatic aria drifted from the television. |
|
operatic career
|
0.72 |
|
The routine and constant travel of an operatic career is wearying. |
|
operatic world
|
0.66 |
|
He knew all the gossip of the operatic world. |
|
operatic role
|
0.59 |
|
Downstairs, the soprano June Anderson huddled, talking operatic roles. |
|
operatic tenor
|
0.59 |
|
Serves four operatic tenors or six sopranos. |
|
operatic music
|
0.53 |
|
Since then, the Carol has been set to Broadway music, symphonic music, operatic music. |
|
operatic repertory
|
0.53 |
|
Ms. von Stade is busy tailoring her operatic repertory. |
|
operatic style
|
0.53 |
|
It has an almost old-fashioned operatic style. |
|
operatic soprano
|
0.46 |
|
Still, she had early success as an operatic soprano. |
|
operatic singing
|
0.39 |
|
There is, more or less, a consensus about what constitutes fine operatic singing. |
|
operatic drama
|
0.33 |
|
But La Divina built a lifestyle that matched operatic high drama. |
|
operatic life
|
0.33 |
|
The end of the operatic life is its vindication. |
|
operatic production
|
0.33 |
|
But an operatic production is not just a theatrical showcase for a concert in costume. |
|
operatic tradition
|
0.33 |
|
The operatic tradition, never strong in England, had weakened everywhere. |
|
operatic stage
|
0.26 |
|
The divas, goddesses of the operatic stage, commanded worshipful audiences that clung to every note. |