Now this is a difficult question! Physically, I'd have to vote that the Chaconne in D minor from Bach's second partita for solo violin is more difficult on violin. It involves many chords which span four or five positions, requiring the player of a modern violin to deal with how to present each note of the chord with the bow as well as the difficulty of fingering them. Certainly the guitar wins here, because the player has all the fingers of the right hand to apply to striking all the notes of the chord at the same time. Both instruments therefore have to deal with sustain: for the violin, some of the notes of each chord (and therefore important parts of the polyphony which must be carried forward) cannot be sustained if the bow cannot be applied to all strings at once. On the guitar, however, getting a chord to sustain over long periods of time requires the player to have developed a very good technique, and carrying the polyphony can be even more problematic. Many professional players and teachers of the guitar have (irrationally, to my thoughts) declared the guitar as not being capable of polyphony in the first place! So, certainly, in both cases, the player has to have spent time becoming the master of their instrument before confronting the piece. After that, the difficulties lie mostly in understanding the piece and getting the instrument to carry one's interpretation to the listener. It is worth noting, for historical completeness, that Bach created versions of movements from the Partitas for the lute, which is in some ways like the guitar. Usually, he rewrote the pieces, rather than carrying them note-for-note. Likewise, within the historical period, written chords like the chaconne provides were arpeggiated (even on violin) in order to carry the polyphonic voices and fill the sustain-weak area between chords. I have not yet heard anyone, lute, guitar or violin, apply this technique to the chaconne, though!
no one cause nick wins :]]
SPOILER - SPOILER - SPOILER - SPOILER - SPOILERTechnically, no one "wins" Christine, as she dies at the end of the show. However, at about halfway through the second act, Raoul comes to the realization that he cannot compete with the Phantom's gift of music in Christine's life and he goes quietly back to France alone.
50 challenge wins = Bronze Award. 100 challenge wins = Silver Award. 250 challenge wins = Gold Award. 1000 challenge wins = Blue Award. Add my miniclip player as your friend. My name is JONEWILKNSUN2. Do it now! Thanks for reading!
Lauryn Hill (9 wins) Missy Elliot (5 wins) Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes (4 wins) Lil Kim (also was the first female rapper to garner a #1) Eve Salt and Peppa Queen Latifah
B minor
"Practice makes perfect" "A winner never quits and a quitter never wins"
Good for motivation but not completely true. While some people struggle through life others have it on a silver platter. Excuse my cynicism but is this really a question? But at some point everything will stop coming to you on a silver plate, and you will have to make it yourself in life. If you whant to get far in life you should never give up.
nobody wins because it never even happened!
Of course DDR wins all the way...u actually exercise
maiden!
A sawhorse.
Zimbabwe
it never said the show just ended.
Why does it matter he never wins lol!
hes allways on as the idiot.thats why he never wins.
there are three fire;flying;rock the internet never lies