µ±Ç°Î»ÖãºÓ¢ÓïÏÂÔØ >> Æ·ÅÆÓ¢Óï >>ж«·½±³Ëо­µä50ƪ£¨´ø·­Ò룩
ж«·½±³Ëо­µä50ƪ£¨´ø·­Ò룩

×ÊÁÏ´óС£º100K
×ÊÁÏÀàÐÍ£ºÆ·ÅÆÓ¢Óï
ÍƼöÐǼ¶£º
¸üÐÂʱ¼ä£º2011-09-17
±¨¸æ´íÎ󣺵ã´Ë±¨¸æ´íÎó
±êÇ©Çé¿ö£º ж«·½    ·­Òë   
±êÇ©½âÊÍ£º ж«·½    ·­Òë   

ÏÂÔØͳ¼Æ£º466
Ìí¼ÓÖÁä¯ÀÀÆ÷ÊղؼР½øÈëÂÛ̳
¸ü¶àÌýÁ¦Çëµã»÷£ºÐ¶«·½ ·­Òë

¼ò½é   

 Ð¶«·½±³Ëо­µä50ƪ£¨´ø·­Ò룩
>01 The Language of Music
A painter hangs his or her finished picture on a wall, and everyone can see 
it. A composer writes a work, but no    one can hear it until it is performed. 
Professional singers and players have great responsibilities, for the    
 

ÏÂÔصØÖ·














 

ÏÂÔØ˵Ã÷

ж«·½±³Ëо­µä50ƪ£¨´ø·­Ò룩ÒÑͨ¹ý±¾Õ¾²âÊÔ£¬²âÊÔ½á¹ûÇë²Î¿´ËµÃ÷¼°½Øͼ¡£
ΪÁË´ïµ½×î¿ìµÄÏÂÔØËٶȣ¬ÍƼöʹÓÃÍø¼Ê¿ì³µÏÂÔر¾Õ¾Èí¼þ¡£
ÇëÒ»¶¨Éý¼¶µ½×îаæWinRAR²ÅÄÜÕý³£½âѹ±¾Õ¾ÌṩµÄÈí¼þ!
ж«·½±³Ëо­µä50ƪ£¨´ø·­Ò룩ÊÇÓÉÍøÉÏËѼ¯£¬ÈôÇÖ·¸ÁËÄãµÄ°æȨÀûÒ棬¾´ÇëÀ´ÐÅ֪ͨÎÒÃÇ!

ÏÂÔØÆÀÂÛ

×Öĸ¼ìË÷ A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z »Øµ½¶¥²¿