Sacred music has a long tradition in the state of Texas. The East Texas Musical Convention was organized in 1855,[2] and is the oldest Sacred Harp convention in Texas, and the second oldest in the United States. The Southwest Texas Sacred Harp Convention was organized in 1900.[3]
Sacred Harp and other books in four shape notation were the forerunners of seven shape notegospel music. According to the Handbook of Texas, "The first Texas community singing using the seven shape note tradition reportedly occurred in the latter part of December 1879. Itinerant teachers representing the A. J. Showalter Company of Dalton, Georgia – including company founder A. J. Showalter – ventured west to Giddings in East Texas and conducted a rural music school that lasted for several weeks." Texas has been home to several gospel music convention publishers, including the National Music Company, Stamps-Baxter Music and Printing Company (founded in 1924 by V. O. Stamps, who later partnered with J. R. Baxter), and the Stamps Quartet Music Company (founded by Frank Stamps). Convention gospel music and community singings still occur in a number of Texas towns, including Mineral Wells, Brownfield, Jacksonville, Seymour, and Stephenville.[4]
Gene Austin was born in Gainesville in 1900. Austin popularized the song "My Blue Heaven", which sold more than 10 million copies. He is remembered as the original "crooner", and was commonly known as "The Voice of the Southland".[7]
Modern musicians like George Strait, from the San Antonio area, continue to carry on the tradition of country music in Texas. Strait "The King of Country"[10] is a singer, actor, and music producer known for his unique style of western swing music, bar-room ballads, honky-tonk style, and traditional country music. He holds the world record for the most #1 hit singles by any artist in the history of music on any chart or in any genre, having recorded 60 #1 hit singles as of 2016.[11]
Zydeco, a musical genre that evolved in Southwest Louisiana by French Creole speakers, is popular in Southeast Texas cities in Houston, Beaumont, Port Arthur, and Orange.[13] It was brought to the region by early pioneers of the music like Clifton Chenier who relocated in the late 1940s and early 1950s during the region's oil boom when many Creole and Cajun people moved seeking better employment opportunities.[14]
Boogie-woogie is a music genre that became popular during the late 1920s, developed in the 1870s. It was eventually extended from piano, to piano duo and trio, guitar, big band, country and western music, and gospel. While the blues traditionally expresses a variety of emotions, boogie-woogie is mainly associated with dancing.
The psychedelic rock movement of the 1960s and 1970s has deep roots in Texas. The Thirteenth Floor Elevators were an American rock band from Austin, Texas, formed by guitarist and vocalist Roky Erickson, electric jug player Tommy Hall, and guitarist Stacy Sutherland, which existed from 1965 to 1969. During their career, the band released four LPs and seven 45s for the International Artists record label. Bubble Puppy was formed in 1966 in San Antonio by Rod Prince and Roy Cox. The name "Bubble Puppy"[20] was taken from "Centrifugal Bumble-Puppy", a fictitious children's game in Aldous Huxley's Brave New World. Bubble Puppy's live debut was as the opening act for The Who in San Antonio.
The Sherwoods[21] were a Corpus Christi quintet that was popular from 1968 to 1969 and made two 45s on Smash Records in 1969. They were a psychedelic pop group, patterned after the Moving Sidewalks (featuring Billy Gibbons) and the Thirteenth Floor Elevators. Red Krayola and The Golden Dawn carried the genre into the 1970s, but as George Kinney of The Golden Dawn said, "when the whole Elevator/Golden Dawn mystique was gone forever, at least as an actual presence on the Austin music scene. It all disappeared like a mysterious dream of super substantial reality, like the shadows of a once and future dawn."[22] The front man of Red Krayola, Mayo Thompson, made a respectable career as a producer of some of the underground's biggest names ― Pere Ubu, Primal Scream, The Fall, The Raincoats, and Scritti Politti to name a few.[23] In the 1990s, the significant influence shown by notable rock pioneer Roky Erickson was honored in the 1990 Warner Brothers release of Where the Pyramid Meets the Eye: A Tribute to Roky Erickson, on which various rockers recorded his songs.[24]
Texas has long had a distinctive punk rock sound emergent from a number of urban scenes, especially those of Austin and Houston. Austin in particular has been considered a significant punk city; major venues there in the late 1970s and early 1980s included Raul's, where the Austin punk/new wave scene began, spearheaded by the Skunks and the Violators in the first weeks of 1978. Other significant venues included the Continental Club on South Congress Avenue and the (now defunct) Club Foot Fourth Street downtown. The Skunks, which featured Jesse Sublett on bass and vocals, attracted significant attention to the scene because of their loyal following and also because touring bands, including Patti Smith, Elvis Costello, the Clash, Blondie, and others dropped in at their gigs at Raul's and the Continental Club to jam with them.
Radio played a major role in spreading the sound and creating the culture of punk. In Houston, two pioneering radio programs in particular, Marilyn Mock's S&M Show on KTRU-FM and Perry Coma's The Funhouse Show on KPFT-FM, were instrumental in helping create the punk scene in that city, through band interviews and playing import-only records, as well as the flamboyant personalities of the DJs. Local punk zines like XLR8 and music weeklies such as Public News, and independent record outlets like Real Records, Record Rack, Record Exchange, and Vinal Edge not only brought in punk and "new wave" sounds from across the world, but they hosted in-store concerts where fans could meet the artists. The punk scene flourished in the early 1980s, led by the Skunks, the Big Boys, The Dicks, MDC, Really Red, The Degenerates, Mydolls, The Hates, The Judy's, the Volumatix, DRI, Sik Mentality, the Killerwatts and Culturcide; so did the scene in Dallas, with groups such as The Telefones, NCM, Bobby Soxx & the Teenage Queers, Bomb Squad, The Hugh Beaumont Experience and Stick Men with Ray Guns. Some notable Houston clubs were the Island, Cabaret Voltaire (a punk rock club in the warehouse district of downtown), the Apocalypse Monster Club (in the Clear Lake area near NASA), the Axiom (in one of the old Cabaret Voltaire locations), Fitzgerald's, The Abyss, and Numbers (a predominantly new wave club). In the mid-1990s, post-hardcore act At the Drive-In formed in El Paso, along with its two offshoots, Sparta and The Mars Volta. Among some notable horror punk and psychobilly bands that hail from Texas are The Reverend Horton Heat, Horror Cult, and The Flametrick Subs.
Tactical Sekt, Lesson Seven, was a Dallas band from 1987-1992 that toured with Skinny Puppy and Nine Inch Nails. During those years they performed with Ministry, Laibach, Swans, Front Line Assembly, Meat Beat Manifesto, Weatherman, Clan of Xymox among others. International Thief Thief, Audio Assault, The Hunger, Sin D.N.A., Virus Filter, Souless Affection are aggrotech bands based in Texas, as is the multifaceted electronic duo Mentallo and the Fixer. Bozo Porno Circus from Houston was awarded "Best Industrial Band" by the Houston Press six years straight from 1998 to 2004, and re-activated in 2009 with new members. Chant out of Austin was awarded "Best Performing Industrial Band" in the 2009-2010 Austin Music Awards. Torque Order is an industrial metal band based in Austin. Dallas-area industrial acts include RivetHead, The Razorblade Dolls, Echelon High, and Koppur Thief.
Texas has also been home to experimental/avant-garde music. In Houston, Black Leather Jesus is among the state's earliest harsh noise acts, and B L A C K I E's fusion of noise and hip-hop is considered by some to be a precursor to Death Grips.[27] Also from Houston, Jandek's music has been defined by its dissonance and atonality, qualities that have drawn comparisons to avant-garde composers like John Cage and Arnold Schoenberg.[28] Other experimental/avant-garde artists of note have also hailed from Austin, with artists like Shit and Shine and Dromez originating, and power electronics pioneer Philip Best of Whitehouse currently residing there.
Vanilla Ice was born in Dallas, and grew up moving between Dallas and Miami.[29][30]The D.O.C. is from West Dallas. He worked with Dr. Dre as an artist and writer. Christian hip hop artist D-Boy Rodriguez received moderate commercial success and was part of the burgeoning christian hip hop scene in Dallas and the rest of Texas in the late 80s, until he was murdered in 1990. Other rappers such as Big Lurch, Mr. Pookie, Mr. Lucci, Big Tuck, Dorrough, and Dondria also hail from Dallas. Rappers such as legends Lil Sin, and P.K.O. as well as Worldwide, Richie Branson, Cadillac Muzik, King Kyle Lee, and Mike Dimes all hail from San Antonio.[31] There is also a burgeoning R&B scene that includes alumni such as Destiny's Child and Gary Clark, Jr., as well as up-and-comers Leon Bridges, The Suffers, Latasha Lee, Tameca Jones, and Alesia Lani among others.
Austin, especially through its central music scene in the corridors of Red River Avenue, South Congress Avenue and 6th Street, has been dubbed "The Live Music Capital of the World". The Texas Music Hall of Fame and Texas Music Museum are also located here. The Austin area is home to Austin City Limits Music Festival and South by Southwest (est. 1987), one of the largest annual music festivals in the United States. Austin has long been a hub of innovative psychedelic sound, from the pioneering Roky Erikson and the 13th Floor Elevators to the Butthole Surfers, and hosts an annual festival celebrating the genre and Austin's contributions to it called Austin Psych Fest.
The transition of the Austin music scene from the mid-seventies progressive country scene to the punk/new wave and alternative influence that followed is captured in Jesse Sublett's memoir, Never the Same Again: A Rock n' Roll Gothic, which details Sublett's experiences with the Skunks and other bands during that time period. Sublett has also documented the Austin music scene in his music-themed crime novels, Rock Critic Murders, Tough Baby, and Boiled in Concrete.[32]
The music culture that exists in Denton arose with the founding of the University of North Texas College of Music Jazz studies program in 1947, the first of its kind in the country. In the last 20 years Denton's vibrant and diverse music culture has grown beyond the collegiate world of UNT's College of Music. In 2007 and 2008, Denton's music scene received feature attention from The Guardian, Pop Matters,[34] and The New York Times.[35]Paste Magazine named Denton the best music scene in the United States in 2008.[36] The Denton music scene received the #1 rank for "Top 10 under recognized music locations" in the world, on a culture blog called Listverse.[37]
From the 1960s to the 1980s, an independent label out of Fort Worth known as Bluebonnet recorded numerous albums of high-quality material by many pioneer artists in the country music and religious genres such as Bradley Kincaid, the Girls of the Golden West, Buddy Starcher, Yodelin' Kenny Roberts, and many other country music and gospel pioneers, many of whom had been popular on radio in the first half of the 20th century.
Before this, however, Bob Wills got his start just north of Fort Worth in Saginaw at the Light Crust Flour Mill. This is where Bob Wills, Leon McAuliffe, and Tommy Duncan first started playing music together. Wills recruited the Light Crust Doughboys and they later changed their name to Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys.
In 1971, Bloodrock had 3 albums at once on Billboard Magazine′s top 100 charts. After 8 albums on E.M.I./Capitol, they maintain a worldwide cult following. A co-writer of Bloodrock songs and hits, Johnny Nitzinger still plays local venues and creates recordings. Toadies' debut album Rubberneck went platinum in 1996. T-Bone Burnett grew up in Fort Worth. Nintendocore band Sky Eats Airplane formed in Ft. Worth.
Still known primarily for Tejano music and Heavy Metal, San Antonio throws the Tejano Conjunto Festival, an annual three-day event celebrating Conjunto music, the largest of its kind in the world. Many of the Conjunto legends lived and recorded here. Names like Valerio Longoria, Santiago Jimenez Sr. and Jr., Flaco Jimenez (who has recorded with everyone from Bob Dylan to the Rolling Stones), Steve Jordan and many others.
San Antonio was also one of the major centers for Chicano Soul along with Los Angeles, California. Sunny & the Sunliners cracked the Top Ten and were the first Mexican American act to appear nationally on Dick Clark's American Bandstand. Other significant Chicano Soul bands included Rudy & The Reno Bops, Royal Jesters, Dimas Garza, The Dell Tones, Joe Bravo, The Lyrics, and Sonny Ace. At first thought, San Antonio, Texas, is not immediately associated with the development of jazz, yet the city does have a long and very creditable history. In the 1920s and '30s, many of the legendary territory bands played there as they swung through south-east Texas, among them Alphonso Trent and Tenrrence T. Holder. Resident in San Antonio itself for long periods was Troy Floyd's band, sometime home to trumpeter Don Albert, and tenor saxophonists Herschel Evans and Buddy Tate. Floyd's band regularly played at both the Shadowland Ballroom and the Plaza Hotel; from the latter, they were broadcast over station HTSA. When Don Albert later formed his own band, which included clarinetists and saxophonists Herb Hall and Louis Cottrell plus trumpeter Alvin Alcorn, they, too, played the Shadowland. Albert, incidentally, was the first bandleader to use the word "swing" in his billing: "America's Greatest Swing Band". And drummer Clifford "Boots" Douglas formed his band, Boots and his Buddies, in San Antonio in 1932 and remained based there. Among individual musicians with long associations with the city were brothers Ernie and Emilio Caceres. Clarinetist and saxophonist Ernie played with many swing-era bands, including those led by Jack Teagarden, Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey, and Woody Herman. After years in New York, where he played with Eddie Condon and Bobby Hackett, he settled in San Antonio, remaining there for the rest of his life. His brothers, the violinist Emilio and trumpeter Pinero, also played in San Antonio. Another member of the Caceres family, David, was a bop altoist at nightclubs throughout the 1990s.[45]
San Antonio also spawned the Butthole Surfers, a hardcore alternative rock band which broke into the mainstream in the mid-1990s, signing to Capitol Records and successfully charting several singles and albums. Other successful acts born and bred in San Antonio are: Boxcar Satan, Two Tons of Steel, The Union Underground, Las Cruces, Sane, Hyperbubble and Fearless Iranians from Hell. San Antonio has deep roots in America's classical music, Jazz, with KRTU-FM representing one of the most significant jazz radio stations in the country, and the Jim Cullum Jazz Band serving as a staple act on the San Antonio Riverwalk. Fellow college radio station, KSYM-FM, features 'The Best of the Beatles' with Richard Turner, relying on one of the most comprehensive collections of Beatles recordings ever amassed to spin on his weekly show.
San Antonio is also home to Local782, a musician-led, non-profit initiative seeking to educate and empower Texas-based musicians by organizing events throughout the year, including seminars, performances, mixers, showcases, and fundraisers. A slew of new rock bands started in the 2000s have joined a couple longer-running favorites, Girl In A Coma - whose song "Clumsy Sky" won Best Punk Song in The 7th Annual Independent Music Awards - and Buttercup, to develop a burgeoning 'indie' scene. These bands include: Blowing Trees, Morris Orchids, We Leave At Midnight, Cartographers, and Education, the last of whose 2011 album, Age Cage, was produced by Gordon Raphael, producer of the Strokes' Is This It and Regina Spektor's Soviet Kitsch. Exponential Records has helped put San Antonio Electronica on the map, catapulting artists like Diego Chavez, a.k.a. Aether and Ernest Gonzales, a.k.a. Mexicans With Guns, to much wider audiences.
San Antonio has a thriving hip hop community as well, including emcee/producer Worldwide, the R&B-tinged duo Mojoe, of Classic.Ghetto.Soul fame, the rapper Question, collaborator with Talib Kweli and Bun B on the track "I'm So Tall", the producer/rapper Richie Branson, born Marcus Brown, whose clientele include Def Jam Recordings and Sony Music Entertainment,[46] and the Vultures crew, whose album Desert Eagles, Vol. 1 was praised by the San Antonio Current's Best Music Advocate of 2010 as "the most complete record to ever come out of San Antonio". San Antonio is also home to Texas Death core band Upon A Burning Body. Christopher Cross from San Antonio had 2 #1 hits on the Billboard Hot 100, including "Sailing" in 1980.
Asosiasi Federasi Sepak Bola AzerbaijanUEFADidirikan1992Bergabung dengan FIFA1994Bergabung dengan UEFA1994PresidenRovnag AbdullayevWebsitewww.affa.az Asosiasi Federasi Sepak Bola Azerbaijan, AFFA (bahasa Azerbaijan: Azərbaycan Futbol Federasiyaları Assosiasiyası, AFFA) adalah badan pengendali sepak bola di Azerbaijan. Badan ini mengorganisasi Liga Utama Azerbaijan, Piala Azerbaijan dan tim nasional sepak bola Azerbaijan. AFFA berkantor pusat di Baku. Sejarah AFFA dibentuk pada tanggal 26 ...
Diocese of the Anglican Church in Canada Diocese of BrandonLocationEcclesiastical provinceRupert's LandCoordinates49°50′37″N 99°57′20″W / 49.8435°N 99.9555°W / 49.8435; -99.9555StatisticsParishes25 (2022)[1]Members2,935 (2022)[1]InformationRiteAnglicanCathedralSt. Matthew's Anglican Cathedral, BrandonCurrent leadershipBishopRachael ParkerDeanDon BernhardtWebsitedioceseofbrandon.org The Diocese of Brandon is a diocese of the Ecclesiastical Pr...
Chogyal Sikkim Bekas Kerajaan Segel Sikkim Chogyal Palden Thondup Namgyal Penguasa pertama Chogyal Phuntsog Namgyal Penguasa terakhir Chogyal Palden Thondup Namgyal Kediaman resmi Gangtok, Sikkim Pendirian 1642 Pembubaran 16 Mei 1975 Penuntut takhta Wangchuk Namgyal Chogyal (Raja-Raja Dharma, Tibet: ཆོས་རྒྱལ; Wylie: chos rgyal, Sanskerta: धर्मराज:) adalah penguasa monarki bekas kerajaan Sikkim dan Ladakh di India pada masa sekarang, yang diperintah oleh...
Official residence and workplace of the president of President of Colombia Casa de NariñoTop: The Executive Residence's northern facade with a columned portico facing the North Lawn and Nuñez SquareGeneral informationArchitectural styleNeoclassicalAddressCarrera 8 A Number 7-26, Bogotá, D.C.Coordinates4°35′44″N 74°4′39″W / 4.59556°N 74.07750°W / 4.59556; -74.07750Current tenantsGustavo Petro, President of Colombia and First familyConstruction startedSept...
American dark fantasy/adventure television series Age of Resistance redirects here. For the era of the Star Wars timeline, see Star Wars sequel trilogy. The Dark Crystal: Age of ResistanceGenreFantasy-adventureBased onCharactersby Jim HensonDeveloped by Jeffrey Addiss Will Matthews Directed byLouis LeterrierStarring Warrick Brownlow-Pike Dave Chapman Kevin Clash Alice Dinnean Damian Farrell Louise Gold Beccy Henderson Helena Smee Katherine Smee Neil Sterenberg Victor Yerrid Voices of Taron Eg...
Swiss-born German geneticist For the Swiss slalom canoeist, see Ernst Rudin (canoeist). Ernst RüdinRüdin in 1944Born(1874-04-19)19 April 1874St. Gallen, SwitzerlandDied22 October 1952(1952-10-22) (aged 78)Munich, West GermanyPolitical partyNazi Party (1937–1945) Ernst Rüdin (19 April 1874 – 22 October 1952)[1] was a Swiss-born German psychiatrist, geneticist, eugenicist and Nazi, rising to prominence under Emil Kraepelin and assuming the directorship at the German Ins...
Indian-American neuroscientist In this Indian name, the name Subramanian is a patronymic, and the person should be referred to by the given name, Ramachandran. V. S. RamachandranRamachandran at the 2011 Time 100 galaBornVilayanur Subramanian Ramachandran (1951-08-10) 10 August 1951 (age 72)Tamil Nadu, IndiaAlma materStanley Medical College (MBBS)University of Cambridge (PhD)Known forResearch in neurology, visual perception, phantom limbs, synesthesia, autism, body integrity ide...
Aéroport international de Pékin-Capitale北京首都国际机场Běijīng Shǒudū Guójì Jīchǎng Vue aérienne de l'aéroport international de Pékin-Capitale Localisation Pays Chine Ville Pékin Coordonnées 40° 04′ 49″ nord, 116° 35′ 04″ est Altitude 35 m (116 ft) Informations aéronautiques Code IATA PEK Code OACI ZBAA Type d'aéroport public Gestionnaire Beijing Capital International Airport Company Limited Pistes Direction Longueur Surface 1...
Cupa României 1999-2000 Competizione Cupa României Sport Calcio Edizione 62ª Organizzatore FRF Date dal 21 settembre 1999al 13 maggio 2000 Luogo Romania Partecipanti 32 Risultati Vincitore Dinamo Bucarest(8º titolo) Secondo Universitatea Craiova Cronologia della competizione 1998-1999 2000-2001 Manuale La Cupa României 1999-2000 è stata la 62ª edizione della coppa nazionale disputata tra il 21 settembre 1999 e il 13 maggio 2000 e conclusa con la vittoria della Dinamo Buc...
Sporting event delegationSouth Africa at the1928 Summer OlympicsIOC codeRSANOCSouth African Sports Confederation and Olympic CommitteeWebsitewww.sascoc.co.zain AmsterdamCompetitors24 (18 men, 6 women) in 7 sportsMedalsRanked 23rd Gold 1 Silver 0 Bronze 2 Total 3 Summer Olympics appearances (overview)1904190819121920192419281932193619481952195619601964–1988199219962000200420082012201620202024 The Union of South Africa competed at the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam, Netherlands. 24 compet...
American actor (born 1985) Frankie MunizMuniz in 2023BornFrancisco Muniz IV (1985-12-05) December 5, 1985 (age 38)Wood-Ridge, New Jersey, U.S.Occupations Actor race car driver Years active1997–presentSpouse Paige Price (m. 2020)Children1 Francisco Muniz IV (/ˈmjuːnɪz/;[1] born December 5, 1985) is an American actor. He played the title character in the Fox sitcom Malcolm in the Middle (2000–2006), for which he earned an Emmy Awar...
Association football match in England Football matchManchester United v Ipswich TownThe match took place at Old Trafford.Event1994–95 FA Premier League Manchester United Ipswich Town 9 0 Date4 March 1995VenueOld Trafford, Trafford, Greater ManchesterRefereeGraham Poll (Tilehurst)[1]Attendance43,804 The football match between Manchester United and Ipswich Town played at Old Trafford, Manchester, on 4 March 1995 as part of the 1994–95 FA Premier League finished in a 9–0 victory fo...
British conductor Charles Groves Sir Charles Barnard Groves CBE (10 March 1915 – 20 June 1992) was an English conductor. He was known for the breadth of his repertoire and for encouraging contemporary composers and young conductors. After accompanying positions and conducting various orchestras and studio work for the BBC, Groves spent a decade as conductor of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. His best-known musical directorship was of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchest...
2014 United States House of Representatives elections in Maine ← 2012 November 4, 2014 (2014-11-04) 2016 → All 2 Maine seats to the United States House of Representatives Majority party Minority party Party Democratic Republican Last election 2 0 Seats won 1 1 Seat change 1 1 Popular vote 305,230 228,059 Percentage 51.53% 38.50% Swing 10.13% 0.16% District results County results Democratic 40–50% ...
Former French colony in Central Africa Not to be confused with Belgian Congo or Portuguese Congo. French CongoCongo français (French)1882–1960 FlagStatusFrench colonyCapitalBrazzavilleCommon languagesFrench (official)Fang, Myene, Kongo, LingalaReligion Christianity, Bwiti, Islam, traditional religionsHistory • Established 1882[1]• Renamed Middle Congo 1903• Reestablished as French Equatorial Africa 1910 CurrencyFrench franc Preceded by Succeeded ...
مونتشي كايوكس شعار الاسم الرسمي (بالفرنسية: Monchy-Cayeux) الإحداثيات 50°26′16″N 2°16′36″E / 50.437777777778°N 2.2766666666667°E / 50.437777777778; 2.2766666666667 [1] [2] تقسيم إداري البلد فرنسا[3] التقسيم الأعلى باد كاليه خصائص جغرافية المساحة 6.22 كيلومتر مر�...
Буковинская Украинская Самооборонная Армияукр. Буковинська Українська Самооборонна Армія Годы существования Сентябрь 1943 — май 1944 Тип партизанская армия Численность не более 600 человек единовременно Девиз За создание самостоятельной независимой Украинской держав�...
List of events ← 1659 1658 1657 1660 in Norway → 1661 1662 1663 Centuries: 15th 16th 17th 18th 19th Decades: 1640s 1650s 1660s 1670s 1680s See also:1660 in Denmark List of years in Norway Events in the year 1660 in Norway. Incumbents Monarch: Frederick III.[1] Events January - Swedish forces laid siege the town of Halden. 22 February - The siege of Halden ends, and the Swedish forces retreat to Bohuslen. 27 May - Trondhjems len was returned to Norway, following the Treaty...
For other uses, see Orthogonality. In mathematics, orthogonality is the generalization of the geometric notion of perpendicularity to the linear algebra of bilinear forms. Two elements u and v of a vector space with bilinear form B {\displaystyle B} are orthogonal when B ( u , v ) = 0 {\displaystyle B(\mathbf {u} ,\mathbf {v} )=0} . Depending on the bilinear form, the vector space may contain non-zero self-orthogonal vectors. In the case of function spaces, families of orthogonal functions ar...
Bat-and-ball game This article is about the sport. For the ball used in the sport, see Baseball (ball). For other uses, see Baseball (disambiguation). Base ball redirects here. For old time baseball, see Vintage base ball. BaseballLos Angeles Angels center fielder Mike Trout hits a home run on a pitch from New York Mets pitcher Tommy Milone on May 21, 2017.Highest governing bodyWorld Baseball Softball ConfederationFirst played18th-century England (predecessors)19th-century United States ...