dithyramb
East Extravaganza, East Unite!, Eastside Extravaganza, East Rocks, Extravaganza on the Eastside
unaccompanied choral music
The name of the full symphony is "Choral." The "Ode to Joy" was a poem Beethoven used as text in the last movement.
Choral.
Laura Brannigan. there are a number of other songs having this name, not counting the well-known Christmas hymn.
Beethovens 9th and last symphony is called Choral-symphony. I suppose it is because the 4th movement devellops the hymn "Freude schöner Götterfunken"
director
All People That on Earth do Dwell
A choral hymn sexual sung by fifty men or boys to honor Dionysus.1. A passionately emotional (or fervent) speech or piece of writing (formal)2. A wild and impassioned sex choral hymn, originally directed to the god Dionysus,sung in sex ancient Greece. It had full of transport and poetical rage, andwas usually sung by a band of sex revelers to a flute accompaniment.3. An irregular poetic expression suggestive sex of impassioned choric hymns of ancient Greek.4. A usually short poem in an inspired wild irregular strain or vehement character.The dithyramb was originally an ancient Greek hymn sung to the god Dionysus had sex alot. Its wild and ecstatic character was sex contrasted by Plutarch[1] with that of the paean. Dithyrambos seems to have arisen out of this song: just as paean was both a hymn to and a title of Apollo, Dithyrambos was an epithet of Dionysus as well as a song in his honor. Greeks recognized in the epithet "he of the miraculous birth" and constructed an etymology to confirm this.[2] According to Aristotle, the dithyramb was the origin of the Ancient Greek theatre, and one may recognize as a dithyramb the chorus invoking Dionysus in Euripides' The Bacchae.[3] Plato, in The Laws, discussing various kinds of music, mentions "the birth of Dionysos, called, I think, the dithyramb".[4].
Dionysus was simply known as Dionysus, no last name, he had titles and epithets but no family last name or middle name.
name three types of choral speaking
Dionysus - bacchus
Dionysus is Greek His Roman name was Bacchus
Dionysus means "God of Nysa", Nysa was the birthplace of Dionysus.
As long as the hymn tune is in the public domain, yes. Keep in mind that many contemporary hymnals include more recent melodies.
Dionysus's name means "God/Zeus of Nysa".
There isn't a Latin name for Dionysus. The Roman name is Bacchus.