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Swing |
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swingJazz played with a steady beat using the harmonic structure of popular songs and the blues as the basis for improvisations and arrangements. The popular music of the U.S. from about 1930 to 1945 (years sometimes called the swing era), swing is characterized by syncopated rhythmic momentum with equal stress accorded to the four beats of a measure. Larger jazz bands required some arranged material, and Fletcher Henderson, Duke Ellington, and Count Basie were the primary innovators of big-band swing. In smaller ensembles, improvised instrumental solos generally follow a rendering of the melody. Swing A Java toolkit for developing graphical user interfaces (GUIs). It includes elements such as menus, toolbars and dialog boxes. Swing is written in Java and is thus platform independent, unlike the Java Abstract Window Toolkit (AWT), which provides platform-specific code. Swing also has more sophisticated interface capabilities than AWT and offers such features as tabbed panes and the ability to change images on buttons. Swing is included in the Java Foundation Classes (JFC) which are provided in the Java Developers Toolkit (JDK). See JFC and JDK.
swing 1. Boxing a wide punch from the side similar to but longer than a hook 2. Cricket the lateral movement of a bowled ball through the air 3. something that swings or is swung, esp a suspended seat on which a person may sit and swing back and forth 4. a. a kind of popular dance music influenced by jazz, usually played by big bands and originating in the 1930s b. (as modifier): swing music 5. Prosody a steady distinct rhythm or cadence in prose or verse 6. a. a fluctuation, as in some business activity, voting pattern etc. b. able to bring about a swing in a voting pattern c. having a mixed voting history, and thus becoming a target for political election campaigners www.jazzinamerica.org swing [swiŋ] (electricity) Variation in frequency or amplitude of an electrical quantity. (engineering) The arc or curve described by the point of a pick or mandril when being used. Rotation of the superstructure of a power shovel on the vertical shaft in the mounting. To rotate a revolving shovel on its base. swing The action of a door’s movement, usually on hinges or pivots, about a hanging stile.
Swing a movement among English farm laborers and small farmers in southern and southeastern England in the 1830’s. It owed its origin to an increase in the number of poor and unemployed agricultural laborers brought about by the economic crisis of 1830 and by the introduction of agricultural machines. The farm laborers attacked the estates, set fire to harvested grain, and destroyed agricultural implements belonging to the landowners and wealthy farmers. The rebels’ demands were stated in letters that circulated under the signature of “Captain Swing,” a fictitious name derived from “swing,” the striking part of a wooden flail (in the figurative sense, the gallows). The movement was suppressed with the aid of troops. Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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