television

television
televisional /tel'euh vizh"euh nl/, adj.televisionally, adv.televisionary /tel'euh vizh"euh ner'ee/, adj.
/tel"euh vizh'euhn/, n.
1. the broadcasting of a still or moving image via radiowaves to receivers that project a view of the image on a picture tube.
2. the process involved.
3. a set for receiving television broadcasts.
4. the field of television broadcasting.
[1905-10; TELE-1 + VISION]

* * *

(as used in expressions)
Music Television
high definition television

* * *

▪ American rock group
      American rock group that played a prominent role in the emergence of the punk–new-wave (new wave) movement. With Television's first single, “Little Johnny Jewel” (1975), and much-touted debut album, Marquee Moon (1977), the extended guitar solo found a place in a movement that generally rebelled against intricate musicianship. The principal members were Tom Verlaine (original name Thomas Miller; b. Dec. 13, 1949, Mount Morris, N.J., U.S.), Richard Hell (original name Richard Myers; b. Oct. 2, 1949, Lexington, Ky.), Billy Ficca (b. 1949), Richard Lloyd (b. Oct. 25, 1951, Pittsburgh, Pa.), and Fred Smith (b. April 10, 1948, New York, N.Y.).

      Guitarist Verlaine (who took his name from the French Symbolist (Symbolist movement) poet Paul Verlaine (Verlaine, Paul)) and bassist Hell, former boarding-school roommates, formed the Neon Boys with drummer Ficca in New York City in the early 1970s. In 1973 guitarist Lloyd joined them; as Television they helped establish , a club in New York City's Bowery, as the epicentre of a burgeoning punk scene. Principal songwriter Verlaine delivered his surreal lyrics with an elasticity that stretched from somber declarations to unearthly squeals, but what set Television apart from other punk–new-wave groups was the improvisational interplay of Verlaine and Lloyd's guitars, which borrowed from avant-garde jazz and psychedelic rock. Patti Smith (Smith, Patti), with whom Verlaine wrote poetry and on whose debut single he played, described his guitar playing as the sound of “a thousand bluebirds screaming.”

      Released on Elektra, Marquee Moon caused a stir among American critics but, like its more polished follow-up, Adventure (1978), sold much better in Britain. Prior to Marquee Moon, Hell left to form the Heartbreakers (with ex-New York Doll (New York Dolls, the) Johnny Thunders), then fronted the Voidoids. Television disbanded in 1978, reuniting briefly in 1992 for an eponymous album and tour. The group reunited again in 2001, performing a series of live dates in the United Kingdom, before once again splitting up. Interest in the band was rekindled in 2003 when remastered recordings of Television's back catalog were released, along with Live at the Old Waldorf, a concert album that captured the group at the end of its 1978 tour. Verlaine also pursued a solo career.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • TÉLÉVISION — La télévision est devenue un fait social de première importance puisque, dans les pays les plus développés, il y avait, en 1990, environ dix récepteurs de télévision pour vingt cinq habitants. Grâce à l’électronique, certains spectacles,… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Television — Télévision « Télé » et « TV » redirigent ici. Pour les autres significations, voir Télé (homonymie) et TV (homonymie). Pour les articles homonymes, voir télévi …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Television — Основная информация Жанры …   Википедия

  • television — UK US /ˈtelɪvɪʒən/ noun [U] (also TV) ► COMMUNICATIONS a system of broadcasting images and sound using electrical signals, and the programmes that are shown: on (the) television »Consumer programmes on the television have enjoyed a rise in… …   Financial and business terms

  • televisión — sustantivo femenino 1. Área: tecnología Uso/registro: coloquial. Sistema de transmisión de imágenes y sonidos a distancia por medio de ondas hertzianas: programa de televisión, presentador de televisión, estudios de televisión. Veo poca… …   Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española

  • television — [tel′ə vizh΄ən] n. [ TELE + VISION] 1. the practice or science of transmitting scenes or views by radio or, sometimes, by wire: the television transmitter, by means of a camera tube, such as an image orthicon or vidicon, converts light rays into… …   English World dictionary

  • Television — Sf Fernsehen (meist TV abgekürzt) erw. fach. (20. Jh.) Neoklassische Bildung. Entlehnt aus ne. television; dieses ist eine Hybridbildung aus gr. tẽle fern und l. visio Sicht .    Ebenso nndl. televisie, ne. television, nfrz. télévision, nschw.… …   Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache

  • television — (n.) 1907, the action of seeing by means of Hertzian waves or otherwise, what is existing or happening at a place concealed or distant from the observer s eyes [OED]; in theoretical discussions about sending images by radio transmission, formed… …   Etymology dictionary

  • television — ► NOUN 1) a system for converting visual images (with sound) into electrical signals, transmitting them by radio or other means, and displaying them electronically on a screen. 2) the activity, profession, or medium of broadcasting on television …   English terms dictionary

  • Television — actorvist adrenaline television appointment television backstory baked potato barking head begathon …   New words

  • Television —    Television (TV) was only just developing at the end of the 1930s, with only one station in New York City and about 1,000 sets in operation by 1939. By 1941, there were 13 stations and the 521 lines of signal had become standard, but World War… …   Historical Dictionary of the Roosevelt–Truman Era

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”