NYPD Blue Essays

  • Analysis of the Title Sequences of Two TV Programmes

    1019 Words  | 3 Pages

    'wrapper' around the programme. It is a vital part of the whole package. 'The Bill' and 'NYPD Blue' are the two television title sequences to be compared. As both programmes are crime related dramas, it will be interesting to investigate whether both title sequences create similar expectations of the proceeding programme. The title sequence of 'The Bill' opens with a close up shot of bright blue flashing lights, which signifies an emergency. Black and white chequered tape rolls across the

  • Religion in August Wilson's Fences

    828 Words  | 2 Pages

    in the blues. Shannon states that, through the blues, Troy feels as if he can communicate and heal his emotional wounds. Shannon explains Wilson justified the need for the blues in an interview with Bill Moyer. Wilson states, "The blues are important primarily because they contain the cultural response of blacks in America to the situation that they find themselves in. Contained in the blues is a philosophical system at work" (382). It is true that for Troy the two systems of the blues and Christianity

  • Tell Tale Heart

    2210 Words  | 5 Pages

    as stated by the narrator: "Object there was none. Passion there was none. I loved the old man. He had never wronged me....For his gold I had no desire. I think that it was his eye!" The narrator states that one of the old man's eyes was a pale blue color with a film over it, which resembled the eye of a vulture. Just the sight of that eye made the narrator's blood run cold, and as a result, the eye (and with it the old man) must be destroyed. Every night at midnight, the narrator went to the

  • The Real King

    672 Words  | 2 Pages

    Riley B. "B.B." King (guitarist/singer, born September 16, 1925, Itta Bena, MS) The most touching bluesman of our time, and the most influential electric guitarist ever, the "King of the Blues" sums up his message with some simple advice. "I would say to all people, but maybe to young people especially--black and white or whatever color--follow your own feelings and trust them, find out what you want to do and do it, and then practice it every day of your life and keep becoming what you are, despite

  • Blue Collar Student: Are Jobs Good Or Bad?

    542 Words  | 2 Pages

    Blue Collar Student: Are Jobs Good or Bad? Are part time jobs good or bad for a student? This is an interesting question that pertains to almost half of all high school students. Jobs provide students with many different qualities but at what cost? This will be the topic of discussion in this paper. Part time jobs are as common to students as mooing is to cows. Many students find it necessary to have a job after school and during the summer. One benefit of having a job is it builds character

  • Beth Blue Swadener's Article Children and Familes: At Promise

    1367 Words  | 3 Pages

    Families When an individual hears the words, ‘at risk’, they immediately think of all the negative characteristics of terminology: teen pregnancy, troubled teens, gang bangers, drop outs, substance abusers, and so on. I know I sure did. In reading Beth Blue Swadener’s article, “Children and Families “at Promise”: Deconstructing the Discourse of Risk”, I’ve learned that there are so much more to labeling at student ‘at risk’. There is actually a history behind the meaning and how ‘at risk’ became such

  • Coleman Hawkins Reign during the Harelm Renaissance

    1649 Words  | 4 Pages

    Coleman Hawkins' Reign During the Harlem Renaissance A very big part of the 1920's was the Harlem Renaissance also known as the "New Negro Movement." It brought out the art, music, and literature side of most African American people. This took place in New York and during the 1920's and ended around the early 1940's. Coleman Hawkins was an African American figure during the Harlem Renaissance that sparked jazz music. A modern figure that resembles Coleman Hawkins is BB King, who continues to promote

  • Tales From The Mekong Delta

    1122 Words  | 3 Pages

    Everything turns a beautiful blue. Sights, sounds, touch, and mind-sets are changed. Creativity flows freely from your mind to the hand to the pen and to the paper. This blue is "the blue that knows you and where you live and it's never going to forget"(107). The blue is the fix and excitement an addict gets from drugs. Addicts look for an escape. They feel that if they just have that hit they will enjoy life and its experiences to a fuller extent. In Kate Braverman's short story "Tall Tales

  • Two Little Girls In Blue

    1077 Words  | 3 Pages

    Two Little Girls in Blue I chose to read a book entitled, Two Little Girls in Blue by Mary Higgins Clark because I have read a few more of her books, and I found them very exhilarating and suspenseful. This book follows those same traits. Steve and Margaret Frawley are the proud parents of two little girls, Kelly and Kathy. It is their third birthday. Kelly and Kathy are both wearing matching little blue dresses that their mother had picked out for this special occasion. Both little girls, hand

  • A Short History Of The Blues

    2249 Words  | 5 Pages

    influential forms of modern music that the world had ever seen or heard: the blues. What the blues did for music is reflective in almost every piece of modern music heard throughout the world today. From rock and roll to country music, all the way to hip hop, the blues is deep down inside shining like a beautiful light that makes that music glow forever. Weather a person is happy or sad, compassionate or indifferent; the blues will always be there to light the way. Right at the turn of the century a

  • Seven Guitars, by August Wilson, Directed by Derrick Sanders

    1029 Words  | 3 Pages

    Wilson’s Seven Guitars directed by Derrick Sanders. Seven Guitars is set in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania during the summer of 1948, where Floyd Barton’s friends gather after his funeral and flashback: Floyd has returned from a trip to Chicago with his hit blues song ‘That’s All Right’ and rekindled love for Vera. After hearing from the record company and their interest in following up his hit song with an album, Floyd becomes ecstatic to finally make things right. After spending all his money, losing two

  • American Folk Music

    1558 Words  | 4 Pages

    Southern music is a noteworthy measure of the folk customs; in man... ... middle of paper ... ...nic scale by twisting the strings of the guitar to attain tones which expressed their feelings. These "bent notes" developed into a normal feature of the blues. Call and response patterns were complicatedly intertwined into the vocal arrangements of black music, both transcendent and secular. Yet another Africanism which merits attention is the widespread use of the "falsetto yell" "falsetto jump" in which

  • Color as Metaphor in Film What Dreams May Come

    1341 Words  | 3 Pages

    Director Ward goes even farther in using color to represent the actual characters themselves. Red is the shade chosen to signify Annie and likewise, blue is used for Chris. Both of these, as will be shown, are accurate in defining these fictitious people. However, it is the profound use of purple in this film that is the true focal point. When mixing red and blue paint, one would find that, after being mixed, they cannot be separated. Likewise, this is true of the life and love these characters build and

  • Communicating Through Music in Sonny’s Blues by James Baldwin

    2888 Words  | 6 Pages

    have been emphasized by American society. Strong family ties have been significant to maintaining healthy lifestyles and relationships across many cultures, including African American culture. Sonny, the younger brother in James Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues”, has suffered from a heroin addiction which caused him to separate from both his parents and his older brother. The essay portrays two brothers who struggle with their difficult Harlem environment, cultural issues, and their emotional detachment

  • The 5 Greatest Guitarists of History

    1678 Words  | 4 Pages

    Music is an important part of people’s lives. Each culture has developed various instruments over the centuries. These instruments were developed to create an enjoyable sound by themselves and to accompany nature’s instrument, the human voice. As time has progressed, different genres of music have passed through their primes; classical music during the Renaissance, jazz in the early 20th Century, and hard rock and pop in its current prime. In each style of music there are always names associated

  • Janis Joplin: Queen of the Damned

    1444 Words  | 3 Pages

    revelation even to Joplin: “All of a sudden, someone threw me in front of this rock and roll band,” she said. “And I decided then and there th... ... middle of paper ... ...s Cited Braziel, Jana Evans. "“Bye, Bye Baby”: Race, Bisexuality, and the Blues in the Music of Bessie Smith and Janis Joplin." Popular Music and Society 27.1 (2004): 3-26. Print. "Janis Joplin - Life Quotes." RSS News. N.p., n.d. Web. 25 Nov. 2013. "Janis Joplin Biography." The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum. N.p.,

  • Texas Blues Musicians

    1027 Words  | 3 Pages

    Listening to blues music is like listening to the artist’s soul. Early blues music had an influence on a large number of artists in Texas to make music that is still heard to this day. There are many noteworthy blues musicians in Texas. Some of the greatest include Stevie Ray Vaughan, Janis Joplin, Freddie King, Billy Gibbons, and T-Bone Walker. Stevie Ray Vaughan is a legend and was a leading figure in the blues-rock genre. Vaughan was born in Dallas, Texas in October of 1954. (Dutton) He was exposed

  • The Blues Music

    859 Words  | 2 Pages

    other forms of music, blues was only recorded by memory and passed down through generations through live performances. The blues began in the North Mississippi Delta post Civil War times. It was heavily influenced by African roots, field hollers, ballads, church music and rhythmic dance tunes called jump-ups. This eventually developed into music that was set up in a call-and- response way so that the singer would sing a line and he would then respond with his guitar. The blues, a uniquely American

  • Jimi Hendrix's Life and Music Career

    2023 Words  | 5 Pages

    the music business helped him to succeed in many areas others did not. His music often changed the lives of the people who he played to and worked with. Hendrix even forged his own musical genre. “The greatest rock guitarist of all time,with a raw,blues-influenced style that brought fire and emotion to rock music unseen before or since”(Unterberger). Jimi Hendrix is remembered as a brilliant innovator of music because of his troublesome childhood, his uncanny dedication, and military background.

  • The Bedroom By Vincent Van Gogh

    864 Words  | 2 Pages

    This painting by Vincent Van Gogh is on display at the Art Institute of Chicago Museum, in the Impressionism exhibit. There are many things going on in this painting that catch the viewer’s eye. The first is the piece’s vibrant colors, light blues and browns, bright greens, and more. The brush strokes that are very visible and can easily be identified as very thick some might even say bold. The furniture, the objects, and the setting are easy to identify and are proportioned to each other. There