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carillon
[ kar-uh-lon, -luhnor, especially British, kuh-ril-yuhn ]
noun
- a set of stationary bells hung in a tower and sounded by manual or pedal action, or by machinery.
- a set of horizontal metal plates, struck by hammers, used in the modern orchestra.
carillon
/ °ìəˈ°ùɪ±ôÂáÉ™²Ô /
noun
- a set of bells usually hung in a tower and played either by keys and pedals or mechanically
- a tune played on such bells
- an organ stop giving the effect of a bell
- a form of celesta or keyboard glockenspiel
verb
- intr to play a carillon
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of carillon1
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of carillon1
Example Sentences
At noon on Tuesday, some church bells and carillons in the Netherlands didn’t sound like they usually do.
Charles Semowich, who plays the carillon inside the 392-foot tower at Riverside Church, said he hears occasional screeching outside his window.
Artists can take over and “play†billboards and the chapel like a carillonneur playing a carillon.
The final gesture comes as a surprise: a sudden, brilliant cascade from opposite ends of the keyboard toward the center, a carillon from the beyond.
The carillon isn’t just a workout for the legs.
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